If Arizona were going to extrdite you from MD but fails to do so - upon the expiration of whatever jail term you were serving in MD, you would simply be released.
Returning a prisoner from one state to their state of origin is called interstate extradition. It is also referred to as interstate rendition.
The term "extradition" does NOT APPLY to intra-state prisoner transfers since they are already within the state's jurisdiction. Extradition applies ONLY to the removal of prisoners from state to state.
An interstate detainer allows other states to prosecute a prisoner who is incarcerated in another state. It allows the other states to gain custody of the prisoner for trial.
No. State are sovereign governments under the constitution, and one state cannot enter another state to retrieve a prisoner without permission from the state holding the prisoner. Counties are only political subdivisions within a state, and there are no such protections. A prisoner may be moved from one county to another within the same state with no court intervention or violation of rights.
As nothing!
Question is not clear. Transferred from where to where? Within a prison system? Within a state? Extradition of a prisoner state-to-state? What? Please re-word and re-submit.
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.
There is no "reciprocity" other than extradition between TN and PA or any other states. If there is an arrest warrant in State X and the person wanted is in State Y, X has to ask Y to allow them to come in to Y to retrieve the prisoner. This request will not be made unless the authorities in X are willing to spend the money to send officers to Y to escort the prisoner back to X. The process of bringing the prisoner from one state to the other is called "extradition."
They have 10 days NOT including legal holidays or weekends.
It is the same thing as a Writ of Extradition. It is used to request and authorize the return of a wanted prisoner from another state. See the related link below.
There is no statutory time limit on this period of time. It can take, as long as it takes for the administrative and legal processes necessary to move a prisoner from state.
Not necessarily. If the county holding the warrant could respond quickly, the jail having the prisoner in custody might just keep them in a waiting area until the officers from the other county arrived. When the prisoner was taken back to the county with the warrant, this would not be a "extradition." Extradition occurs only between states.