Not if they've already served punishment for the behavior.
40
The correct spelling is passenger (non-driving vehicle occupant).
20%
20%
It permits police officers to make an immediate search of the passenger compartment of an automobile incident to the arrest of an occupant or "recent occupant." It applies when officers do not initiate contact with the occupant until AFTER the occupant has voluntarily exited the vehicle and walked away from it.
All of the above.
All of the above.
In order to search a vehicle, the police need consent, a warrant, or probable cause.If the police do not have any of those three, they cannot search the vehicle. If they do it anyway, anything found in the vehicle can be excluded from a criminal prosecution as illegally obtained evidence.Another View: No situation involving law enforcemnt activity can be answered with a generalized response. Every situation stands on its own. It may be lawful. Like many things concerning 'the law,' it depends on the situation existing at the time of the search.
no, every occupant of a moving vehicle must wear a seat belt in nfld
Press 'E' when you're close to a vehicle, to ride it. You will throw the occupant out, if the car is currently being driven by someone else.
Occupant is a French equivalent of 'occupant'. It's a masculine noun whose definite article is 'le'* ['the'], and whose indefinite article is 'un' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'oh-koo-paw', and its feminine equivalent 'occupante' is pronounced 'oh-koo-pawnt'.Passager is an equivalent, in terms of a vehicle's 'occupant'. It's a masculine noun that's pronounced 'pah-sah-zheh'. Its feminine equivalent 'passagère' is pronounced 'pah-sah-zhehr'.Titulaire is an equivalent, in terms of the 'occupant' of a position of employment. There's just the one form for a female or male job 'occupant'. It's pronounced 'tee-tyoo-lehr'.
During a car frontal collision, some part of the occupant's kinetic energy is transferred to the vehicle through the restraint system. The high ratio of the transferred energy has the advantage of protecting the occupant. This phenomenon is called “ride down effect”.