Article Four deals with relationship of states, full faith and credit clause, privileges and immunities clause and extradition
No. If you are being held by another jurisdiction for something else they do not have to rush there to extradite you.
If you are not a citizen of the United States, yes, you can be extradited for illegal activity. *If you are found guilty of making terrorist threats or other illegal activity within the US and you are not a US citizen you can be tried and if found guilty serve the imposed sentence and then be permanently deported, deportation is not extradition. An example of extradition is, when a criminal flees to another jurisdiction to avoid prosecution or incarceration whether it is another US state or another country. The extradition process is then used to have that person returned to the jurisdiction where they are to be tried and/or incarcerated, the nature of the crime is irrelevant. It is usually much more difficult to have a person extradited from another country than it is from another state.
If the amount of the check is large enough to make it a felony (for example, $300 or more in Kentucky) then there can be an extradition. Whether or not the authoities will opt to do it is another question that varies in every jurisdiction.
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.
Yes
When a US state has custody of a criminal who is wanted in another US state, the US Constitution demands that he/she be extradited (Article IV, Section 2, Clause 2).
Yes, it is possible.
Special Jurisdiction
Mandates Statutes. Codes.
custodial interference and abduction
Based on the Constitution, a person is charged with a serious crime in one state and then flees to another state can be arrested. He will then be brought back to the state where the crime was committed and all the necessary processes will be executed there.
Moving a trial to another jurisdiction is called a "change of venue."