The Extradition of Fugitives Clause of the United States Constitution holds that upon demand, states are required to surrender a fugitive to the state which requests this action. Stipulations are the request must be formally made, and a copy of the indictment charging the fugitive with the crime must be made available to the state that is to extradite.
Article Four
Article Four
In Article IV, Section 2, Clause 2 of the US Constitution, the interstate rendition of fugitives was established. Beginning in 1793, other laws were enacted to support this clause. Generally, it states that the executive authority of a state may order that an indicted suspect or fugitive be returned to face charges in that state, in the jurisdiction in which a crime was committed. Conflicts with this can occur where more than one state has a legitimate claim on the individual involved. The precedent to blocking extradition in Kentucky v. Dennison (based on slavery, 1861) was reversed by the US Supreme Court in Puerto Rico v. Branstad in 1987.
article four section two
Being returned to the state where a crime was committed is "extradition" .
According to the Wikipedia article "Extradition law in the United States", Indonesia is one of about fifty countries that do not have an extradition treaty with the U.S. - Indonesia does not have an extradition treaty with the United States for most crimes, however they do allow extradition to the US for drug smuggling or other drug-related crimes.
It sounds like you are asking about an extradition request. It is based on Article IV, Section 2, Clause 2 of the US Constitution.
flees from one state to the other
Sri Lanka, Brazil, and Morrocco. ... After someone has posted the above, I make this link to an article by Karen Fish which suggests there are 160 countries which Italy has no extradition agreement with, but they do not include Brazil or Sri Lanka. http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/14300292-amanda-knox-italy-has-no-extradition-treaty-with-160-countries
It over-ruled Kentucky vs Dennison and ordered the Governor of Iowa to turn over a fugitive to Puerto Rico for trial. Federal Courts have the power to enforce extradition based on the Extradition Clause.
Yes you can: Employees will have the opportunity to choose among several plans during the open enrollment period.
It is called the surrender of an accused or convicted person by one state or country to another (usually under the provisions of a statute or treaty)Legal surrender of a fugitive to the jurisdiction of another state, country, or government for trial.Source: Answers.comIt's when you're turned back over to the place where you committed a crime. For example, if you commit a crime somewhere in the U.S., and you flee to Canada, the Canadians can deport you back to the U.S., and that would be extradition. Same goes for states and counties.
The article I just read contained a lot of nomenclature that I do not understand.