Your question is unclear. Not all places require licensing of guns. In general, the person committing the illegal act gets charged.
As the driver is unlicensed it could be argued that they did not know how to behave on the road and therefore were the cause of the collision.
Every 45 seconds in America
Usually for a person to be charged with this offense he must have an actual deadly weapon or device with which he could kill someone. A person could otherwise be charged with aggravated assault under the right circumstances.
they go to jail
you can use cars that you borrow after your own car gets into an accident.
You get to, accident would not have happened if you werent on the road!
The majority of the time no because it is an insured's policyholder's duty not to let unlicensed people driver their car because they cannot legally drive.
Both you and the original caller ! If, for example, you have calls to your home-phone forwarded to your mobile (or vice-versa) the person calling you gets charged for the original call to the first device, and you get charged for the diverted call from one device to the other !
Yes, your fingerprints prove that you were there. It's called 'acting in concert.' If an offense (burglary is a felony) is committed with a firearm. It doesn't matter who is carrying the firearm, everyone gets charged with it.
The person who caused the collision is at fault. If someone ran a red light he/she gets the points on his/her license and his insurance gets to pay the damage. The unlicensed driver just gets the ticket to force him/her to get a license.
It's extremely rare for a person receiving a text message to be charged for it. It's usually the sender who gets billed for it !
In general, yes. It gets a little fuzzier if the person who is "registered to carry a gun" is actually carrying one at the time. The firearm would need to be clearly and unambiguously in the licensed person's possession and not the felon's.