Days. If after that they havent gotten you, you are to be released
Another View: If the person is being held for extradition. once the extraditing state has confirmed that they will extradite you, the process has begun and "it takes as long as it takes." It is nowhere near as easy as simply driving over the state line and picking them up and hauling them back. 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 30-45 days, file a Writ of Habeus Corpus to determine where the process stands.
You can ALWAYS be arrested for an ARREST warrant regardless of issuing agency or the arresting agency.Additional: There is widespread mis-understanding of the term "extradite." Extradition refers only to removing a person from one STATE to another STATE.If you are wanted on a warrant and are arrested in the same state the warrant was issued in, no extradition is involved - only a county-to-county transfer.
A Bench Warrant - if you fled out of state - when you are caught and arrested - you will be returned via a Writ of Extradition, sometimes called a Governor's Warrant.
You will be arrested and brought before the judge that issued the warrant.
A person can be arrested in another state if there is an active warrant in the system. It is not unusual for people to be arrested on out of state warrants.
Yes, you certainly can. The DA is Georgia will then request extradition of you from Florida which WILL be granted.
Yes, if a country has an extradition treaty with the country where the arrest warrant was issued, you can be arrested and extradited to that country to face the charges.
depending on the reason for the warrant, i.e.; misdemeanor/ felony, reciprocity agreements between states, and the cost of extradition, it is possible to be arrested.
It depends on the amount the Illinois warrant is for and if it is for a criminal warrant or for a civil case. Depending on that, the arresting agency will contact the issuing agency and will determine if it is enough to go thorugh extradition.
A Writ of Extradition (also known as a Governor's Warrant) is issued when one state want to remove and return a fugitive that they want from another state who has that person arrested and held in jail.
No, but the court in Texas can ask that you be held for extradition as soon as the Georgia court is through with you. You would then be brought back to Texas to answer to the charges on the Texas warrant.
Kind of unlikely. If/When they run your name into the sytem to check on you, the warrant will probably show up, and you'll be arrested.
The arrest warrant can be enforced anywhere in the US, and any other country with which the US has an extradition agreement.