If you have not committed a crime in the state you live in, then no you can't be charged twice of the same offense. That would be double jepordy, and is against the law. Your home state CAN hold you until the state you committed the crime in either extradites you or drops the charges
Added: The above answer seems unclear.
If you committed a crime in state "A" and then committed the same crime in state "B" then BOTH states can charge you seperately, because you committed a separate crime in each state.
If you committed a crime only in state "A" but then fled to state "B," state "B" cannot try you for a crime you committed in another state. HOWEVER they can hold you in jail until state "A" comes for you to return you to state "A" for prosecution .
If you committed the same offense in two different states, yes, you can be charged in both states since they are separate offenses against those state's laws. (e.g.: You robbed a gas station in state 'A' and then robbed a gas station in state 'B', you can be charged in both states for Armed Robbery.)
If you committed the same offense, seperately, in each state, you can be charged with each separate crime. You cannot be tried in one state for a crime committed in another.
Question isn't very clear, but yes, you CAN be charged as an accomplice or a co-conspirator for a crime what was being planned, but for one reason or another was never committed.
Defending another person is not a crime. You could be charged criminally if you committed assault or battery. Whether this happened is not clear from the question.
Yes. A person can be charged for every single burglary they committed.
There are many people who committed suicide after being charged with hacking. One man was known as John Messber. He committed suicide in the year 2009.
Huh? It depends on WHAT crime they committed as to what they get charged with.
No.
You can ALWAYS be charged and convicted of a crime that you just committed. However, it cannot be made a part of the same case you were going to court for.
You cannot be charged twice for committing the SAME IDENTICAL offense. Which is not to say that you cannot be charged with multiple offenses which you committed during the commission of the same event. OR - if you were once charged and convicted of robbery, if you go out and commit another robbery, it does not mean that you are forever insulated from being charged wtih robbery.
TREASON against the United States is a crime which can be committed outside the country for which you can be charged in the US. For other crimes committed on foreign soil, you can be charged in the US as a FUGITIVE and held pending extradition from those countries with whom we have extradition treaties.
If you committed the same offense, seperately, in each state, you can be charged with each separate crime. You cannot be tried in IL for a crime committed in IN, and conversely, you cannot be tried in IN for a crime committed in IL.
no
No. If you committed that crime in one county and were arrested, tried, and convicted of THAT crime - it does NOT protect you from being charged and tried for an identical, but seperate, crime you committed in another location. If you committed TWO identical offenses, the fact that you were convicted of one in one county, does not protect you from the consequences of the crime you committed in another county.