collectively
He can, there is no law that prohibits it; however, if he or his boyfriend engage in sexual activity, both or either could be charged with criminal activity under US federal law, and the laws of most states. Be patient, and wait until you are 18.
A suspected criminal is either bought to custody or court.
The criminal records of individual arrestees are always on file. If you are referring to records of crimes that they have investigated, it can depend on how old the case is as to whether or not it is stored in a records warehouse. You will have to be more specific if either of these answers were not helpful.
The word "sex" typically refers to either the biological characteristics that define an individual as male or female, or to sexual activity and reproduction. It can have different meanings depending on the context in which it is used.
Either to deposit or create activity within a bank stated period of time to pull it out of dormancy. Rules created within individual banking rules and regulations.
As you do not specify which cannibal group you are talking about, it is difficult to tell. Usually ex-prisoners take either route: a) they keep low and try to live a normal life or B) they resume in criminal activity
Any Sun sign can be a criminal, although perhaps in differing ways. Much always depends on the full natal chart of an individual.
They are not mutually exclusive. Federal law is either civil or criminal, just as is state law.
You can either scare the **** out of yourself by worrying about it, or realise that paranormal activity isn't real.
Customarily used as a slang expression referring to either the form used to request a criminal history check, or to refer to a "clean" criminal history (i.e.: no record).
Collectively exhaustive means that a set of events or outcomes covers all possible scenarios or possibilities without any overlap. In other words, when all the events in a sample space are considered together, they account for all possible outcomes.
Not necessarily. An action may give rise to either criminal or tort liability, or both, but there are plenty of torts that are not criminally actionable. Nuisance is a good example. An activity that causes a nuisance, such as continuously burning leaves on your lawn, may not be a crime, but you might still be liable to your neighbor who is negatively affected by the smoke entering his property.