Yes:
If:
You are not married to them. And even then its not allowed in some places.
This is known as fraud and several other crimes depending why it is being done.
No, because then it wouldn't belong to you to be resold.
It is an someone's else's abandoned car on someone else's property, and you are trying to get it.Very bad idea. Leave it alone. Get envolved with this car and you are just asking for trouble. Turn around walk away and forget this car.
As long as the car still belongs to someone else, then you do not have to reregister the car in the new state. I have a car with Texas plates, and live in Louisiana, however, the owner of the car still lives in Texas. So when if or when I get pulled over I explain that I am not the owner of the car and I don't have any problems.
The person driving the car should get into some trouble but you'll get in more trouble because you let someone else drive your car and that person was doing some reckless driving.
Depending on the state, there should be an option to file the car as not being driven. It's more like a registration exemption then actually registering the car. If you are not going to drive the car, this is the best option. If you want to register the car because someone else is going to be driving you around, they should let you do that.
In Mass. can you get a ticket for driving someone else's car with an expired inspection sticker?
Yes, you are responsible for it because you gave the other person permission to drive the car and the only way you won't be responsible for it is when the other person has signed a paper stating "I Do take responsibility of the damage of this car, when driving it".I Know my answer is long. But it will help you a lot.
Certainly the person that was driving without a license. It would depend on the circumstances if anyone else did.
In essense what you are describing is loaning a car to another person for an indefinate period of time. If the arrangement is that the other person is to make the payments, it is a foolish thing for you to do, dangerous to you financially. But, no, you cannot get into criminal trouble, only trouble of a financial nature.
No it isn't illegal to purchase a car for someone else, but you will be responsible for payment.
Sure, you can get in trouble. After all, you are likely to be suspected of having stolen the car, even if you didn't. You would have to be able to prove that it had actually been stolen by someone else, and you were an innocent bystander. Any time you are in a stolen car, that is a suspicious circumstance.
No, that is for when you hit someone else.