0 past simple and past participle of extradite --
1 to make someone return for trial to another country or state where they have been accused of doing something illegal: --
He will be extradited to Arizona from Florida.
First, they could allow those people who had been identified by overseas authorities to be extradited.
Nor have the perpetrators of those crimes been extradited.
No persons have been extradited in the two years since it was signed.
We have an objective need to get these people extradited quickly.
If a person is extradited, none of those things will apply.
Similarly, if people commit offences abroad and the other country wants them, we should ensure that we expeditiously arrange for them to be extradited.
I have recently experienced the suffering of people being extradited who maintained that they were innocent.
I am not aware of anyone who has been extradited for this offence.