Don't understand the question. A subject awaiting extradition is either being held in jail in the jurisdiction that arrested him, awaiting the 'wanting' state to come for him - or - he is in transit back to the 'wanting' state - or he is being held in jail in the county where he is gong to be tried. Therefore, except for the few hours he is in transit he is going to be in either one jail of the other.
Only insofar as the fact that you are a correspondent of that particular inmate. The prison authorities have the authority to open, read, and censor any mail or packages sent to inmates.
It's done at the state-to-state government level by means of a so-called "Governor's Warrant" (more commonly known as "extradition.") Who it is that actaully carries out the extradition is changeable. Sometimes it is the State Police, sometimes it is the County Shieriff's Dept and sometimes it is the officers of the agency who filed the original offense report.
not at all. However, if GA files an extradition request and SC is the asylum state, then they can( are required to) hold fugitive for 30 days awaiting GA authorities to transport.
It there is an active extradition warrant for him he can be held until the legal system accomplishes the legal steps to remove him from the holding state to the extraditing state. It is not an overnight process. If you are held more than 60-90 days file a Writ of Habeus Corpus to determine the status of the process.
No, it has extradition.
No. State are sovereign governments under the constitution, and one state cannot enter another state to retrieve a prisoner without permission from the state holding the prisoner. Counties are only political subdivisions within a state, and there are no such protections. A prisoner may be moved from one county to another within the same state with no court intervention or violation of rights.
They can hold them as long as they need to for the state of Indiana to pick them up. Unfortunately in this type of situation you are at the mercy of both states - Oakland could release them and have Indiana issue a warrant for their arrest or hold them for extradition as long as they want. The crimes are probably pretty serious if Indiana is willing to come pick you up for extradition so it probably won't take long (not more than a month).
This depends on the County Judge's order, which generally gives about two weeks for transport order to be issued.Added: If this is an "in-state," "intra-county" occurrence, extradition proceedings do not apply.
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Every country has no extradition treaties with the.
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It appears no. Extradition treaties with Brazil:https://www.loc.gov/law/help/extradition-of-citizens/chart.php