You may still become legally married by proxy. A "proxy marriage" is a marriage where a stand-in (a "proxy") stands in for the absent groom or bride. A proxy marriage is handled entirely through the mail. No travel is necessary. And the civil marriage ceremony (using proxies) actually happens, by POA (power of attorney), outside of the prison; so the prison can't stop the marriage from taking place! The marriage is fully legally valid and all U.S. prisons MUST recognize the marriage.
Marriage firms that facilitate prison proxy marriages include: VZS Proxy Marriage, Proxy Marriage Now!, MarriageByProxy. com (S&B), Dream Makers Marriage Services, MPPM Proxy Marriage, and Forever Dream Makers Marriage Services.
Yes ! Being incarcerated does not absolve you of debt !
When a person is incarcerated for a number of years easily exceeding their life expectancy (for example, sentenced to 500 years in prison), this typically meant that the person was convicted of many crimes, but none of those crimes were extreme enough to warrant life in prison or the death penalty, thus compounding the amount of years he/she must spend in prison. While being incarcerated for say, 500 years is effectively life in prison, the sentence is just part of legal proceedings.
Yes, being incarcerated means being in jail or prison as a result of committing a crime.
It means to be locked up
People often joke about things that are uncomfortable to discuss. Most people who have not been to prison don't know what it is like being locked up, and most don't want to go there and find out. They often lack sympathy for the people in there, so they may joke about prison rape, when that is actually a serious problem. Sometimes homophobia or anger at the incarcerated fuels the prison rape jokes.
Daniel
Indiana State Prison seems to be John Dillinger's favorite abode, to which we could add Allen County Jail in Lima, Ohio, and Crown Point prison in Indiana. There doesn't appear to be any mention of him being incarcerated in the Mobile, Alabama jail.
No, being married outside of the U.S. will not create a problem in obtaining a divorce.
Yes it does. You still can't sign a Contract/Lease until 18 or kicked out until age 18, but you can leave home at 17.
Even in prison a person has the right to an attorney. The person in prison just has to ask the warden they would like to see a divorce attorney and they will usually grant your request. It is fairly easy to get a divorce in this manner, but if person in prison have a business, property, home, etc., then it is like any other divorce and it will have to be decided on who gets what.
First of all, Mark David Chapman is STILL incarcerated, justifiable so! He was sentenced 20 years to life. He has been denied parole 6 times, last being September 7, 2010. It there is any justice left in this world, this poor excuse for a human, will die in prison!
Yes and you can goto prison before being deported.