What does it mean to be sign over a waiver of rights to be expedited from another state back to the state that the supposed crime was committed?
I want to know and understand what does it mean to be sign over a waiver of rights to be expedited from another state back to the state that the supposed crime was committed?
Law Office of Joe Dane
| Joe Dane
Orange, CA
Orange, CA
A person held on a fugitive warrant has a right to an ID hearing to challenge whether or not they are the person actually wanted in the warrant. They can agree to waive that hearing and agree to be extradited. The requesting state is then notified and they have to arrange to have the detained person brought back.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/5/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/5/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answered By: Law Office of Peter F. Goldscheider
It means the person is waiving their rights to extradition proceedings which involve the other state proving that the person is charged in another state and his identity.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/12/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/12/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answered By: Law Offices of James H. Dippery, Jr.
Briefly, it means that you will give up your right to an extradition hearing and will be transported, by the other state, to where the warrant issued. You are not really giving up much since the local judge will almost certainly grant extradition and you will be shipped out.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/6/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/6/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answered By: Law Office of Edward J. Blum
It means that you do not contest the extradition and it can go forward. You are giving up on the issue of extradition.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/6/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/6/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answered By: The Law Office of Harry E. Hudson, Jr.
One has a rght to force the prosecution to prove that the person named in the warrant for extradition is the person in custody. They are the same rights any defendant has. cross examine witnesses and challenge any physical evidence , subpoenas and not to testify against oneself. A waiver is the surrender of those rights. does not admit any charges which the wanting state alleges.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/6/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/6/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answered By: Dennis Roberts, a P.C.
You mean extradited, not expedited, though maybe you do mean expedited. By signing a waiver of rights in the state where henow is he is agreeing to go back quickly (expedited?) to the state who wants him and the court in the sending state wants to make damn sure he doesn't come back later and say that court screwed him. Most out of state folks agree to comeback or they sit in that other states forever.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/5/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/5/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answered By: Law Office of Jeff Yeh
If you waive fighting extradition (not expedition), you will be transported to the state where the crime was committed right away. If you don't waive extradition, then it will take the government a lot longer, because they have to let the whole extradition process play out in court.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/5/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/5/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answered By: Law Office of Daniel K Martin
I believe you are referring to extradiction which is when one jurisdiction turns a person over to another jurisdiction. When this happens a person has the right to have a hearing to determine whether the transfer is legal. When that person waives the hearing they are waiving extradiction rights.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/5/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/5/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answered By: Law Office of Mark Bruce
In California, the court will not sign an extradition order unless there is a hearing to determine whether you are the person who is wanted on the out-of-state warrant. This usually takes a few days or weeks. Most people usually know the warrant is for them and will give up this hearing so that they can be sent to the other state quicker.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/5/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
Answer Applies to: California
Replied: 1/5/2012
Disclaimer: The response above does not form an attorney-client relationship. This answer may or may not apply to you and should not be relied upon as legal advice. LawQA does not make any representation as to the expertise or qualifications of this attorney. This attorney may or may not be admitted to state bar of your state.
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