you are not supposed to use the siren unless it is an emergency, i dont know that they would make a big deal out of it if you were just doing it in front of one house unless there was a big deal made out of it.
The bill for all expenses goes to the person who is admitted to the hospital.
The charges they charge are the ambulance ride to the hospital, the oxygen, any medicine they give you. Private business that charge for the occupancy of the ambulance.
Depends on the charges
Discount rate
This is an opinionated question. Any charges can be nolle prossed for many reasons by the state attorney (prosecutor).
Private services generally charge more than the hospital services.
You don't dispute the charge. You thank the officers for looking out for your child, regardless of whether or not you feel it was justified. It is unlikely there are grounds for dispute. The party who will be responsible for paying charges will be the parent(s) or legal guardian of the minor child. What actions might be taken if the charges are not paid would be the decision of whomever operates the ambulance service.
You can find the charge(s) they were arrested for on the arrest book of the law enforcement agency that arrested them, or the court charges on file at the Clerk of The Court office at the courthouse they were tried in.
A broken leg and some glass over you mabe even a reward well Actually you could get arrested. Not much of a reward. Felony charges for assault and battery. Vandalizm charges.
The two most common battery types used for emergency lighting are lead acid and nickel cadmium.
Yes...BUT - this "yes" is DEPENDENT upon the SPECIFIC circumstances of the particular case.
Yes, it very much is. It is potentially both a Federal Offense and a State Offense the exact charges depending on what state you live in.