Once the process has begun, it takes as long as it takes. It is nowhere near as easy as simply driving over the state line and picking them up. A formal inter-state legal and administrative process must be begun and followed in order to legally take custody of the defendant and remove them from one state to another. If you haven't heard anything in 30 days file a Writ of Habeus Corpus to determine where the process stands.
Once extradition is processed to Kentucky for child support, often you are given the option of doing jail time or you make a purge pay to get released from jail. The exact actions that will take place depends on your circumstances.
The legal term "extradition" does not apply to intra-state transfers of wanted fugitives. Extradition applies only to those fugitives removed state-to-state. It sounds like you are being held for a plain old prisoner transfer.
Jefferson County Jail - Kentucky - was created in 1905.
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).
Until they are picked up by the county that holds the warrant.Added: The term "Extradition" is used only when referring to out-of-state warrants.
The death penalty is much more expenseive than life in jail in Kentucky.
Unless you are being held on a totally separate criminal charge - you are probably being held for the MP's to come get you and return you to military confinement. No extradition procedures are necessary to return military prisoners to military custody.
Too broad a question - more information is needed in order to answer. What is the person charged with? What is he being held in jail for? If he is being held for extradition, he won't have a court date until he is extradited back to the state that wants him - THEN - he will receive a court date.
If VA has been notified and has placed an extradition "hold' on them, no. If VA declines to extradite then it MIGHT be possible, but the judge will probably take into consideration that you have already fled prosecution in one jurisdiction and the conclusion can be drawn that, if released from jail, you would do so again.
As soon as the jail you were in had a hold on you for your Texas warrant, you should be getting backtime. You may be responsible for proving that credit, so you'll need to get documentation. I've never heard of them only having 10 days to complete the extradition. Your waiver is in essence a request for speedy trial, therefore Texas has to get you here and tried within six months.
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.
Jail