All 50 states honor the extradition warrants of each other. However, it is up to the issuing state, which has only a certain amount of time to arrange for transportation of the prisoner. If that time expires than the person could be set free after the disposition of any cases that the apprehending state has against them.
Yes, they will arrest you on the strength of the other county's warrant and hold you for the other county to come and get you.
One county within the same state will honor another county's arrest warrant and hold you until they come to transport you back to the county that wants you. The actual legal act defined as "extradition" doesn't come into play in INTRAstate removals. Extradition only applies to INTERstate removals.
When a person is being held in a county jail on warrant from another county, then a bail bond cannot be posted until that person has been transported to the county which issued the warrant.
No. You must surrender yourself to the state in which the warrant was issued.
Depends on what the warrant's for. If they want to get a hold of you, and they find out you're located in another county, they simply ask the County Sheriff's Office in that county to pick you up.
Yes a judge from one county can issue a search warrant for you in another county. Another view: Use caution with the first answer. If the two counties are within the same Judicial District - THEN a judge from one county can issue a warrant to be served in the other county. HOWEVER - if the counties and the judges are not part of the same judicial district they cannot issue valid warrants, cross-jurisdictionally, in the other county.
Then you could be extradited to the county that issued the warrant.
When you have served your period of incarceration in the first county, before they release you they should check to see if there are any other "criminal holds" on you. When they find the bench warrant they will hold you for the other county to come get you and return you to the court that issued the bench warrant.
If the warrant was entered into the state criminal computer system the odds are that you will be found and returned to the county that 'wants' you.
Yes. The likliehood that the warrant wasn't entered into the state criminal justice system is pretty slim. But if you want to chance it, go ahead.
Many judges are state and federal judges, so perhaps their jurisdiction is extended beyond the county they are in. If a search warrant is presented to you by the police, you can be certain it has merit just as it stands.
how do i fimd out if I have a warrant in marion county Indiana??
You stay in jail.