The question is unclear. If it is asking how long you must remain in custody awaiting the arrival of the Marshall's service, the answer is - until the extradition paperwork is processed, forwarded, received, and acted upon by the holding authority. If you are still awaiting pickup at the end of 15 days, file a Writ of Habeus Corpus.
On the other hand, if it is being asked how long the Marshall's Service takes to drive or fly you back - that trip may take anywhere from a few hours to a day or more depending on how many stops for prisoner pick-ups at other locations, they may have to make.
One county within the same state will honor another county's arrest warrant and hold you until they come to transport you back to the county that wants you. The actual legal act defined as "extradition" doesn't come into play in INTRAstate removals. Extradition only applies to INTERstate removals.
The Supreme Court has ruled that reading of Miranda Rights is no longer necessary, that the people of the US have been so inundated with it, that all know it. Most Law Enforcement Officers still read it as a matter of protocol or department policy though. An extradition warrant is another matter, however. The person being extradited is already in custody, has already been arrested, and arrest is the time that Miranda is typically read. US Marshals at this point are simply transporting a prisoner.
In Pennsylvania, in order to fight extradition to another state, the defendant can contest the validity of the charge against him and petition the court for the issuance of a writ of habeas corpus. The Uniform Criminal Extradition Act provides some uniformity and, generally, the same legal requirements that are required for requests from other participating states apply to Pennsylvania requests as well.
A Governor's Warrant is another name for an Extradition Warrant. You can choose to fight extradition back to the state that wants you, but it is unlikely you will stop the warrant from being issued.
No. The warrant remains in effect and that person is eligible for future arrests on that warrant.
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All states and US possessions honor each other's extradition requests.
A "Writ of Extradtion" sometimes called a "Governor's Warrant."
A Governor's Warrant is what is commonly known as a WARRANT OF EXTRADITION. It is used to return fugitives to the requesting state from the state in which they were apprehended.
There are several foreign nations who will not honor extradition requests from the US (I won't name them), but insofar as the US is concerned, all states and US possessions honor each other's requests for extradition.
A Bench Warrant - if you fled out of state - when you are caught and arrested - you will be returned via a Writ of Extradition, sometimes called a Governor's Warrant.
The way extradition works is the jurisdiction issueing the warrant sets the terms of the jurisdiction as far as how far they are willing to have someone extradited. All jurisdictions in the United States will hold an offender for extradition provided the issuing jurisdiction is willing to have the offender extradited the given distance. For example someone wanted for not paying a traffic ticket may be set free a few hundred miles from the jurisdition that issued the warrant, while someone wanted for a felony will have a hard time finding a rock to crawl under on this planet.