They have 10 days NOT including legal holidays or weekends.
Once it has begun there are no statutory limits on how long it can take. You can be held for extradition for as long as the extradition process takes. It is not a quick process in that both administrative and legal procedures must be gone through to lawfully remove your from one state to the other. If you are still waiting after 60-90 days file a Writ of Habeus Corpus to determine where the process stands.
10 Days
about 5 hours
There is no statutory time limit on this period of time. It can take, as long as it takes for the administrative and legal processes necessary to move a prisoner from state.
The legal term "extradition" does not apply to intra-state transfers of wanted fugitives. Extradition applies only to those fugitives removed state-to-state. It sounds like you are being held for a plain old prisoner transfer.
As long as extradition has begun and it is proceeding according to the orderly legal process of both states, there is no statutory requirement that it be accomplished within a certain timeframe. It takes as long as it takes.
four hour
8 hours
The Sabine River separates the lower half of Texas from Louisiana.
About 9 hours to drive it.
Port of South Louisiana Port of Houston, Texas Port of Beaumont, Texas Port of Long Beach, California Port of Corpus Christi, Texas Port of New Orleans, Louisiana Port of Huntington-Tristate, West Virginia Port of Texas City, Texas Port of Baton Rouge, Louisiana Port of Mobile, Alabama Port of Lake Charles, Louisiana Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana Port of Los Angeles, California Hampton Roads, Virginia Port of Tampa, Florida
If you mean 'can' you do this, then the answer is yes, as long as the 17-year-old has parental consent to get married.