Well, I guess you answered your own question. There should be no law enforcement involved in a normal repossession. But if someone assaulted the repo man, pulled a gun on him, or smacked his windshield with a crowbar, etc., he can call the police. Or, if you have been hiding the vehicle and the bank finally got p***d off enough to ask a judge for a writ of replevin, the sheriff WILL come to enforce that court order to surrender the car. If you refuse to turn it over then, you will be arrested for contempt of court. Nice answer too bad its wrong.Your felony has no bearing on the repo it is a civil matter not criminal.All they can do is take your car.Even if the car is up for repo and you are stopped by the police the cops don't know and don't care it's not their problem.Keep your chin up been there myself.
If they discover where you are, they will have you arrested in that state. Then you will be transported to Kentucky where you will be incarcerated. If you are arrested in the state you are in, your name will be in the system and the county in Kentucky where you have the warrant will be contacted.
You can be arrested by a law enforcement officer taking you into custody, bringing you in, then you get formally charged. Any felony is serious.
Unable to asnwer your question, you give no indication of what you were charged with.
They get arrested, charged, and stand trial.
It will depend on whether or not it is a felony. Kentucky would typically consider assault as a felony, but it could be a lessor crime. As such, Kentucky has no statute of limitations for felonies.
as long as you have not been charged with a felony or a domestic abuse, then yes
If you were charged and convicted of a Misdemeanor offense, yes. If you were charged and convicted of a Felony, no.
If you were arrested and charged with misdemeanor offense, and subsequent investigation discloses that the crime(s) actually reached the level of a felony, then yes, the charge could be upped to a felony.
It will depend on the specific classification of the crime in question. In Kentucky for a felony there is no limitation. For a misdemeanor it is one year.
Of course, you can be charged with any felony you commit, but I think you're asking if it is a felony to hide the car from the repossession agent. Technically, no. But, if you are obviously hiding it and the lender gets really PO'd, he can go to court and have a writ of replevna issued. Then the sheriff will come along with the repo man and they will leave with the car - or with you. The correct answer is: it not a felony to hide a car from creditors who are trying to reposses......period.This is a civil matter not a criminal matter.The writ is issued in rare cases.
There is no statute of limitations for arson in Kentucky. In Ohio, the statute of limitations is 20 years. In Indiana there is no statute of limitations if it is charged as a class A felony, but if charged as a lesser felony the statute is 5 years.
There is no SofL. The felony con be prosecuted at any time.