There is no such thing as EXTRADITION between counties of the same state. They simply do a "courtesy hold" on you until the other county sends someone for you. Extradition is a legal term used when governments remove people from state to state or nation to nation.
Then you could be extradited to the county that issued the warrant.
If they place the warrant info on the interstate system and say they will extradite you, yes they will.
if someone is being held for another state and to be extradited, do they still have jail privileges, and do they have three meals a day.?
You would need to go to the county courthouse where you received the misdemeanor to request it be expunged.
yes.
generally yes, pennsylvania will extradite for almost all crimes except fines owed to a district justice office, if you were on probation and abscondered, they may however if it is for a misdemeanor and you are on the other side of the country ie california and your fines are paid off they may not, because it is not worth it, but if it is for a felony you are guaranteed to be extradited! if it is in the county where philadelphia is they may not if it is for a misdemeanor, you should have someone call the county ask if the charge is extraditable, tell them you wanna help the person take care of it and ask them what they will do, usually if you turn yourself in and this will work out in your favor
They don't base the extradition criteria on charges, it is based on bond amount. Anyone who has an active Coconino County Warrant with a bond amount greater than $750.00 who is detained outside of Coconino County will be extradited.
The maximum jail sentence for a misdemeanor that will be served in a county jail is one year.
No, a warrant issued by one jurisdiction in Georgia can be served anywhere in the state. BTW: Extradition only applies to out-of-state removals.
If you are in one jail in one county and another put a hold on you how long before they come and get you
Not necessarily. If the county holding the warrant could respond quickly, the jail having the prisoner in custody might just keep them in a waiting area until the officers from the other county arrived. When the prisoner was taken back to the county with the warrant, this would not be a "extradition." Extradition occurs only between states.
If there was an outstanding warrant on the charge, yes. Also, in some jurisdictions there are, what is called "Probable Cause Misdemeanors" (i.e.- altho they are classified as misdemeanor offenses, they are of such a high or aggravated nature that law enforcement can arrest a perpetrator even after the event and/or the perpetrator has fled the scene).