Question isn't very clear, but yes, you CAN be charged as an accomplice or a co-conspirator for a crime what was being planned, but for one reason or another was never committed.
A defendant is a person who has been charged with a criminal offense.
yes, but it depends on what the crime was and what your parole terms were and where you committed the crime
you are charged with a crime after you have been arrested on suspicion of said crime.
Yes, you are charged for murder and will soon be returned to the location where you committed the crime.
Literal is not a crime. It is not even a verb.
Being charged is not the same as being convicted. A person who has been charged might still be found innocent of the crime of which he or she has been charged. However, if you have been charged and also convicted of aggravated assault, that is a serious crime and it would involve jail time.
yes.Added: He has been charged with Involuntary Manslaughter.
Ex Post Facto protects a person from being charged with breaking the law or committing a crime if they committed it before the law went into effect. For example if I committed a crime but at the time it wasn't against the law but they soon passed a law saying that it was illegal they could not come after me for having committed a crime that at that time would not have been a crime.
It will depend on the crime that has been committed if a person can press charges 3 years after the crime. If is a different crime, it will depend on the statute of limitations. However, a person cannnot be charged for a crime twice. That's considered double jeopardy.
It is the place where the crime or alleged crime was believed to have been committed.
Ben Roethlisberger has not been officially charged of any crime. He has only been accused.
If you think a crime has been committed then report this to the police. The police have a DUTY to prosecute CRIMINAL activity. Theft (steeling) is a crime.