Hire an attorney to fight extradition.
Violation Of Probation
Maryland,Virginia,Georgia,North Carolina, and South Carolina
The five southern colonies are : Georgia, south Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, and Maryland. Maryland and Virginia are also called Chesapeake colonies.
Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia
It is Maryland, Virginia, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina.
It is strictly up to the probation officer. I think that it also depends on the violation, i.e., is it a technical violation (not reporting, not paying supervision fees, fines) or was there another crime "allegedly" committed. But usually, yes. And as far as the "10 day rule"....that is not true. I have known of people being incarcerated waiting for another state to come pick them up for up to 30 days, not counting weekends. Your question is rather vague. I don't know if said person is currently incarcerated. I think it also depends on when the violation occurred. I am certainly no expert, but am speaking from what I know and what *I* have seen with my own eyes. The best thing to do is to contact the probation officer or the probation office (if the specific officers name is not known). Hope this helps!
I think it is, it is becoming popular in many states
Maryland, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia
Delaware, Maryland, Virginia
south Carolina and Maryland
North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Virginia
Maryland, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and North Carolina border Virginia. North Carolina, Kentucky, West Virginia, Maryland, and Tennessee. North Carolina borders Virginia to its south. The bordering states of Virginia are Maryland, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, and West Virginia.