Yes. Under US law you must be advised of the reason for your incarceration. You will be brought before a judicial officer and advised of the charges and the reason for your incarceration - if the extraditing state is coming for you - and whether or not you wish to waive formal extradition.
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.
Basically the laws of every state with regard to extradition are the same: if a person is arrested in the state from the one that issued the warrant, the person is taken to the county jail of that jurisdiction and awaits extradition to the County seeking the person. Normally an extradition hearing is held to determine whether the individual is in fact the one that is being held for extradition. The individual can admit he is such person being sought (he is not admitting guilt) or challenge this. The state is seeking the person generally has up to two weeks to arrange for the defendant to be transferred, or the defendant can be released.
The person getting cited for being at fault for the accident gets belligerent enough to the point where it warrants their arrest, and they resist the officer arresting them.
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.
It's certainly one legal argument that you could try to fight extradition with.
Dubai will not extradite.
the first person you should notify is a retard like your mother.
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.
Attractive, appealing, alluring, arresting (as in arresting everyone else's attention), and aesthetic (aesthetic legs, not an aesthetic person).
Anne Frank
the action of extraditing a person accused of convicted a crime!!! :))))
You can notify authorities of the whereabouts of said person and then it is their decision whether or not to take any action.