In Middleton, Massachusetts, an inmate can typically be held for up to 30 days after signing an extradition waiver for a warrant in Ohio. This period allows for the completion of the extradition process, during which Ohio authorities can arrange to take custody of the inmate. If extradition does not occur within this timeframe, the inmate may be released. However, specific circumstances or legal nuances could affect this timeline.
It's possible that the inmate has charges in another other than the one he is incarcerated in. If so, the facility has to release him into custody of that county.
carefully
yes until ruled on by a court
Cops
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.
You should consult with an attorney who specializes in custody issues.
Before or after a change of custody?
An inmate lookup provides the community, where a prison is located, the opportunity to have access to information regarding in custody inmates. This information is considered public information.
Judicial Custody means the person is sent to jail such as Central jail under the control of Judiciary ,not under Police station. The inmate can be taken to judicial custody after the court orders.
They can hold them as long as they need to for the state of Indiana to pick them up. Unfortunately in this type of situation you are at the mercy of both states - Oakland could release them and have Indiana issue a warrant for their arrest or hold them for extradition as long as they want. The crimes are probably pretty serious if Indiana is willing to come pick you up for extradition so it probably won't take long (not more than a month).
There are no statutory time limits on the extradition process - 'it takes as long as it takes.' Once the process has begun it requires administrative and legal processing in order to lawfully move a detainee wanted in one state from the apprehending state. If you are still held in custody in the apprehending state after 60 - 90 days, file a Writ of Habeus Corpus to determine where the procedure stands. Maybe you shouldn't have run in the first place.