The first question would be, Are you being supervised by Tn.. With ICOTS (federal govt) rules and regulations your Florida county of origin would have to come get you when picked up. Tn. is one of the worst states to transfer someone to and also very aggressive to have one returned when there is a VOP. The answer: Each county sheriff is responsible for entering the vop warrant and returning the violator. The reality is most Fla counties only enter F3 in FCIC (FL CRIME COMPUTER) not NCIC (NATIONAL CRIME COMPUTER) and generally will not leave the state for a violation. Of course there are exceptions. Are you one?
Yes.
Yes, they could... if they wanted to. It might depend on the seriousness of the original offense and what the VOP consisted of.
THERE SAFE AS LONG AS THERE NOT IN THE STATE THEY RECIEVED THE DUI
It depends on what the violation is and what you are on probation for.
here in the state of Florida the is no statue of limitation on a probation violation (SORRY)
It depends on the probation, felony or misdemeanor. Either way, if you get picked up in Florida they will run a nationwide warrant check on you. If they find the po violation, they will let the that county know and they will have a set amount of days to come get you or your automatically released. Here in Texas its 10 buisness days
in florida
yes you will have to finish your punishment but if it was misdemeanor or perhaps a felony 5 then it is highly possible they wouldn't extradite i know from first hand experience
Yes, it is possible. They can extradite on ANY offense they choose. A VOP offense means that you skipped on your sentence (which I'll bet you probably plea bargained down from a greater charge) and are an absconder from your jail/prison time. You are, in effect, a fugitive.
All US states and territories honor each other's requests for extradition - there are no 'safe-haven' states - it is impossible to say whether a particular state will choose to extradite you or not, there are simply too many variables - usually it depends on the offense and the seriousness of it - most states will USUALLY extradite for felony offenses.
Yes, Colorado will extradite for felonies, and especially for violent crimes.
I believe you mean EXTRADITE. All US states and territories honor each other's requests for extradition - there are no 'safe-haven' states - it is impossible to say whether a particular state will choose to extradite you or not, there are simply too many variables - usually it depends on the offense and the seriousness of it - most states will USUALLY extradite for felony offenses.