Sure. Unless you have a contract, you are an "at-will" employee and you can be fired for ANY non-discriminatory reason (ie race, gender, age). It is up to your employer whether or not to fire you, but if your employer does, it wouldn't be illegal.
In the law, being "in possession" does not necessarily mean holding it in your hand or having it on your person. It also means being anywhere near it, or around it, where you could have had ready access to it.
It sound as if you are thinking of Goering.
Yes he can
The statute of limitations is different from state to state. Would need to know three things before being able to answer. (1) The state the offense was committed in, and (2) the exact nature of the offense, and (3) did you flee the state to avoid arrest? All that is necessary before being able to give an answer.
No, such is not possible. If the president committed a crime, he would be impeached and convicted and lose his office. Then he would not be president anymore and could not pardon anybody. He could then be indicted and tried just like anyone else.
Being charged with the crime is a formal accusation by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS- In England and Wales) that you have committed a crime. In the USA, the law enforcement or prosecutor charges I am led to believe. Same principle however. *It certainly does not mean you are guilty, and everyone is innocent until proven guilty by a court of law. It then has to go to court for a conviction or acquittal (guilty or not guilty) Thus, a conviction is basically a finding of guilt for the charge by the court (who represent the state and the community at large) that you have committed a crime and are to be punished for such offence, this is sentencing.
If you were convicted of a felony, or one of the misdemeanor charges which disqualifies you from being allowed to purchase, possess, or have access to firearms, then no. A pardon only excuses you from the crime you committed - it doesn't reverse the ruling against you, and you remain a convicted felon.
The temporary holding area for files is the buffer which is located in the RAM. The purpose of the buffer is to act as a holding area that will enable the CPU to manipulate data before being transferred.
No. If you committed that crime in one county and were arrested, tried, and convicted of THAT crime - it does NOT protect you from being charged and tried for an identical, but seperate, crime you committed in another location. If you committed TWO identical offenses, the fact that you were convicted of one in one county, does not protect you from the consequences of the crime you committed in another county.
An angel holding a Bible
my husband goes before the parole board in 2014 for being convicted in 2008 for vehicular homicide in georgia....what does this mean
Free thinking women were most likely to be convicted of witchcraft.