10 Days
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.
If Arkansas has a fugitive hold on an individual in Texas, they typically have 10 days to retrieve the person once the hold is placed. This timeframe can vary based on specific circumstances or legal processes involved. It’s advisable to consult legal counsel for detailed information regarding extradition procedures.
North Carolina can hold an individual for extradition to Virginia for up to 30 days. This period begins when the person is taken into custody on the extradition request. If the extradition proceedings are not resolved within that timeframe, the individual must be released unless additional legal action is taken to extend the hold. Ultimately, the specifics can vary based on the case and any legal complexities involved.
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.
72 hours
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.
I was a professional bail bondsman for about five years in Mississippi. So even though I am not a lawyer and the advice that I am giving you is for entertainment purposes only, I have run into this situation several times. It depends on wether the warrant is for a felony or misdeamenor offense, the nature of the offense, and wether the law enforcement agency that wants him will bear the expense of coming to get him. They must also pay the Texas agency any expensess for housing him in the mean time. If it is a felony, he should have an extradition hearing, if he refuses to be extradited, the governor of Mississippi will have to get the governor of Texas will have sign an extradition writ. Most people do not fight extradition.
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.
They can hold you as long as they want as long as the issuing state orders you held for extradition.
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.
In the context of the U.S. legal system, the Supreme Court (SC) itself does not directly hold individuals for extradition; rather, it reviews cases related to extradition when legal disputes arise. Extradition procedures typically depend on state laws and treaties with foreign nations, which can dictate specific timeframes for holding individuals pending extradition. Generally, individuals can be held for a reasonable period, often up to 30 days, but this can vary based on the circumstances and jurisdiction involved. Ultimately, the final decision on extradition rests with the courts or the executive branch, depending on the case.
I'm not sure Memphis tn is a crime.