Yes. Your Federal ID stays the same forever.
You need to explain the reasons for the move and why it was necessary (to be with a spouse who was transferred, military relocation, etc.)
That means your state doesnt allow a debtor to use federal exemptions in order to keep items/property of a certain value. If your state doesnt allow federal exemptions, then the state will have their "own" BK exemptions.
Trade Readjustment Allowance or TRA is a special program by the federal government to keep the workers who were affected by the increase in imports. They can be qualified for reemployment services, training, job search allowance, and relocation allowance.
The IRS recommends federal income tax forms and related documents should be kept for three years. How long to keep state income tax forms depends upon state laws.
Yes, it will.
Not your state income tax refund. But the state may have a claim on it and they would keep the necessary amount that is owed for that purpose.
Cases will be filed in federal court if the plaintiff and the tobacco company are from different states. However, if a plaintiff sues the local stores he/she bought from the case may proceed in state court. However, tobacco companies will remove to federal court under theories that federal warning laws preempt state claims. A federal judge then decides to keep the case in federal court or remand to state court.
Yes, if it's also a federal crime or offense. Some laws are state specific and having no federal laws governing the act. However, some things are illegal both at a state level and federal level. Keep in mind though, if there was not enough to prosecute at a state level, it's unlikely there's enough evidence to prosecute at a federal level too.
To find a substitute for the state banks as a place to keep federal funds.
The idea was to keep it separate from the states so that no one state would have an advantage or disadvantage over any other. The federal governmnet is not supposed to be able to dictate individual rights assumed by the states. Therefore it is necessary to keep federal power and state power separated.
Kevin Rudd's seat of Griffith is a federal seat, not a state seat. The elections held in Queensland on 24 March 2012 were state elections, not federal elections. Kevin Rudd will only be contesting his seat in the federal election of 2013.
The Constitution is considered the Supreme Law of the Land, and the national (Federal) government takes precedence over state governments, under Constitutional principles. This does not keep state governments from asserting states' rights, however, and not all Federal laws are enforced throughout the states.