A state has jurisdiction in impounding lost animals and some states do consider them abandoned. This is for the safety of the public and for the animal that is lost.
When you have no insurance on your vehicle, you void your registration - insurance is required by law. Yes, they can impound a car from out-of-state in that instance.
Assuming we are talking about a police impound lot, it will depend on the laws of your state. When a police officer stops a car in your state, whatever paperwork he will ask for during the stop is the same that you will need to show to the impound attendant to get your car back.
Depending on what your state laws are, the impound lot will auction your car to try to pay the storage bill.
The Abandoned State was created on 2013-11-11.
varies state to state but as a general answer depends on the offense, for some they can kep it and do sell.
Yes, a registered tow truck operator can auction any vehicles that stay on their lot long enough to be filed in an AVR (abandoned vehicle report) the papers they get from state patrol function as a temporary title until the sale is complete Source: I work in a towing/impound office in Washington state
California's animal abuse laws are among the strictest in the nation. Penalties include incarceration, fines and counseling. How your case will be punished depends on the exact animal cruelty law you were convicted of violating.
If you got a call and your car was in anoter state then if you wanted it back then you would have to go to that state and get it back usually at an impound lot.
The vehicle will likely be impounded to the police impound lot, where it will be kept under security until the impound fee is paid. The vehicle also may be searched, if the police obtain a warrant, or if state law permits.
Yes, there are so many abandoned dogs, cats, rabbits, etc. that there is an animal shelter in every state. Just look in your Yellow Book Pages.
what is the state animal
Eventually the state will auction it off to recoup their costs. If you have a lien on it currently, the lien holder may take it out of impound and auction it - the state recovering their costs takes priority over the lien holder, and the lien holder will lose all claim to the vehicle if the state auctions it off. Either way, the payments for the vehicle will remain your responsibility.