Once the extraditing state has indicated that they WILL extradite you then the extradition process has been started. It is not immediate nor is it quick, there are many administrative and legal steps in removing someone from one state another for prosecution that must be taken to satisfy the law. If one is still incarcertaed awaiting removel after 30 days, file a Writ of Habeus Corpus to detemine the status of your extradition.
Yes.
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.
10 Days
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.
72 hours
California is a state that is an extraditing state. The state of California needs the demand from the state requesting extradition, the governors warrant, and probable cause. This process can take 1-3 months.
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.
Not enough information to answer specific to the code, but it sounds like the only thing you need to know is the "hold for extradition" part. That means the extraditing state wants the subject returned.
They can hold you as long as they want as long as the issuing state orders you held for extradition.
The way extradition works is the jurisdiction issueing the warrant sets the terms of the jurisdiction as far as how far they are willing to have someone extradited. All jurisdictions in the United States will hold an offender for extradition provided the issuing jurisdiction is willing to have the offender extradited the given distance. For example someone wanted for not paying a traffic ticket may be set free a few hundred miles from the jurisdition that issued the warrant, while someone wanted for a felony will have a hard time finding a rock to crawl under on this planet.
One county within the same state will honor another county's arrest warrant and hold you until they come to transport you back to the county that wants you. The actual legal act defined as "extradition" doesn't come into play in INTRAstate removals. Extradition only applies to INTERstate removals.
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).