As he is waiting a trial he can not leave the state without the permission of the judge. He may be a habitual murderer.
If you know you'll be back before your court date it doesn't matter.
UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED (A.K.A. your conviction sheet reads specific restrictions)
Do you have a restirction on you forbidding travel? If you are on probation, you would have to check with your PO. Don't miss your court date, or they will issue a warrant on you.
If the Prosecution wishes to add, change, clarify or remove charges from an Indictment, they make a motion for Leave to Amend the Information (the wording may vary by state). Leave, in this case, means permission. The Information is the list of charges and specific details they're accusing someone of committing.
Yes. And there can be, depending on what state you live in, criminal misdemeanor charges.
You cannot drop charges. The state presses and/or drops criminal charges.
Criminal charges are not pressed by an individual, they are always pursued by the state. Only the state or district attorney can press charges.
When the state decides to remove the Marijuana-related criminal charges from the statutes.
If you are facing criminal charges, you need the advice of an attorney in your state, not WikiAnswers.
As with all crimes, the state and state alone makes the decision about whether or not to pursue criminal charges. It isn't up to the alleged victim.
This would be different from state-to-state. Contact the nursing licensing agency for your state to determine the exact answer.
If you were charged with a felony assault and the charges were dropped, you do not have a criminal record. The charges can be picked up by the state at a later date.
An individual cannot press charges. Only the state makes that determination. If you would like the state to consider criminal charges against a person, contact the police and report the incident.
It sounds like the defendant is being detained, or will be detained, at the request of the state pending (presumably) charges by the state prosecutor.