County's don't extradite from other states, states extradite from other states. It can depend on how badly they want you back and whether or not your name appears on the interstate NCIC system as wanted.
Yes, Arizona will extradite a wanted suspect charged with a F1 (1st Degree Felony) back to Ohio.
Yes
The decision to extradite is normally made on a case by case basis. If it's felony bad check it will likely he handled differently from a felony assault.
You can ALWAYS be arrested for an ARREST warrant regardless of issuing agency or the arresting agency.Additional: There is widespread mis-understanding of the term "extradite." Extradition refers only to removing a person from one STATE to another STATE.If you are wanted on a warrant and are arrested in the same state the warrant was issued in, no extradition is involved - only a county-to-county transfer.
There is no time limit...Tennessee is doing a favor to Fulton County by holding the person and they can be held, by law, until Fulton County Sheriff's Office decides to extradite the individual so that the warrant can be served. Tennessee pretty much is out of the picture.
There is NO way to answer these questions with any degree of certainty! It all depends on the person and the offense and how badly they want you back. ANY state can extradite for ANY offense it chooses. Whether they will choose to extradite, or not, is an unknowable fact.
In the United States you can only be legally married to one person at a time.
California is on the ;;utah is on the east arizona south oregon and idaho north.
Yes.
Dubai will not extradite.
All states extradite to all other states. Some wont extradite on some cases, but they are few and far between. If California asserts that they will extradite/accept the person back (and arrange the transportation), all states will cooperate with the extradition. You can try to run to a handful of other countries, but why not just get it behind you, and turn yourself in.
To extradite a person means to give them up to the jurisdiction of another state/country - usually