If they amounted to criminal offenses, yes you can, if it is determined that it was you who committed them. Whatever you are referring to, most (all?) states have statutes of limitations on certain crimes but they usually take several years to pass before the opportunity for prosecution lapses.
It also depends on what kind of "actions" you are talking about. If it was doing drugs, then no, there is no evidence to convict you.
If you were stealing, then yes, if there is evidence to prove that you were the culprit, then you can be arrested and convicted for it if the evidence is strong enough.
Arrested is the past participle of arrest. It's also the past tense.
The past tense of "arrest" would be "arrested".
Britney Spears has been arrested in the past over a child custody dispute. She refused to hand over her children at a court appointed time. There have also been rumors of arrest for an indecent exposure charge, but these rumors are unconfirmed.
Yes, they could be arrested. Statute of limitations on such crimes typically don't expire until the victim is over the age of majority or longer.
about 6%
They have one up and down :D
"Arrested" can be a past participle or an adjective, depending on how it is used in a sentence.
How many US coast guard personnel have been deployed to Iraq in the past 12 months?
6 months past August is February.
Yes, in most cases a person can travel to America if they have been arrested in the past.
No, the word arrested is a past participle, past tense of the verb to arrest. The past participle of the verb is also an adjective (arrested decay).The noun form is arrest, a word for the seizure by legal authority to take into custody; a word for an act of stopping the process or progress of something; a word for a thing.
The present perfect and simple past tenses may initially appear to be interchangeable, but this is not the case. The present perfect tense is concerned with actions that have not yet completed, and the simple past tense refers to actions that have completely finished. Example: Present Perfect - "I have washed ten cars this week!" (the week is not yet over) Simple Past - "I washed ten cars last week." (The week is entirely over)