They can hold you as long as they want as long as the issuing state orders you held for extradition.
There is no statutory time limit on the extradition process. Once notified and the legal process of extradition is begun, and is proceeding, it takes as long as it takes.
as long as they don't now about the warrant then yes. but i wouldn't suggest it it isn't a good idea
A Governor's Warrant (also known as Extradition) is issued when the apprehending state officially notifies the "wanting" state of the fugitive's arrest. It is both a legal and an administrative process, and how long it takes is not governed by statute. It can take as long as it takes. If the fugitive is still awaiting extradition in jail after 60 - 90 days, they should file a Writ of Habeus Corpus.
as long asperson on probation
Can last up to fifteen days.
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.
Forever.
A bench warrant is issued by a judicial officer- they last until the warrant is either withdrawn by the judge who issued it or it is quashed. a warrant usually lasts indefinitely until thecharge is cleared up.
It can depend entirely on what the warrant was issued for and who, or what, agency issued it
California is a state that is an extraditing state. The state of California needs the demand from the state requesting extradition, the governors warrant, and probable cause. This process can take 1-3 months.
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).