If convicted 3yrs or 5,000 fine or both
The plural form is... 'officers in charge'.
Yes, they can charge you with fleeing and eluding a police officer and other traffic offenses.
As stated in the question the word "detent" undoubtedly is going to an abbreviation of the word detention. Therefore the full charge would be; evading arrest and detention by means of a vehicle. In other jurisdictions it would probably be worded as "fleeing and eluding." It all depends on how the applicable law happens to be worded in your jurisdiction.
Officer in charge is just a general term used to describe the officer who has authority over a specific situation. It can refer to many thing - an officer in charge of a specific criminal or traffic case, the officer who is in charge of a division's station house at a specific point in time, or even a command officer in charge of a specific event. This term does not reflect or describe any one specific rank.
If your vehicle is in a private impound or police impound then yes. They only are obligated to give you without charge your government issued ID card(s), medication(s), and corrective lenses. They can hold anything else, even your house keys, clothes, food, whatever. Also if you "abandoned" your vehicle at an impound in Minnesota and the towing company goes through the legal process of placing a lien on your vehicle the property goes with the car.
Probation states that you cannot commit a crime or be arrested. If the officer that stops you only issues you a ticket then there is no problem with your probation. However, if the officer takes you into custody, well then you have a problem.
OIC
A Train Officer
A General.
OIC
Notary charges in Minnesota are $1 per act.
You can visit Minnesota for free. There is no admission charge to enter the state.