Yes, but law enforcement may not do much if the runaway is near the age of eighteen.
Yes.
Call the police and report them as a runaway.
No, unless they don't talk to their parents. If they talk to their parents then they are not a runaway.
yes, you maybe charged with several different offenses. not only by law enforcement by also by the parent or gaurdian of the juvenile.
In Texas, you can move out of your parent's house at the age of seventeen without being reported as a runaway. You do not have to have their consent, but it is still not legal. But you will not get any kind of punishment by law because of this.
The law on runaways in the State of Florida include a citation. When a juvenile runs away, they are either detained until a parent picks them up or brought home to the custody of the parents. A runaway in the State of Florida will have a court date.
Yes
If a parent tells a child to leave their house, they typically cannot then report the child as a runaway since it was the parent's instruction for them to go. However, it's important to consider the laws in your specific location as they can vary. Communication and seeking support from appropriate authorities or social services may be helpful in such situations.
no see links
Your parent no longer has full custody, it was taken away, so you would be a runaway, and they would be harboring a runaway.
A single seventeen year old in Utah technically must have a parent or guardian until they reach the age of eighteen, however, they do not need to live with this parent or guardian. So, yes, they can move out of their parents house, but they must do so with the parent's permission. The only exception to this rule that I know of is a married seventeen year old. If a parent or legal guardian gives permission for their seventeen year old to be married, once that seventeen year old is legally married, they no longer need to have a parent or legal guardian.
Well yes. You still ran away.