Want this question answered?
For sure you cannot return something which is not in your possession anymore but it's your duty to report it asap to the nearest police station or authorities. At least you will have legal support for your claim that the item has been stolen, until the matter has been solved within the legal process.
if you have legal actions pending like bankruptcy or consolidations pending you only have to tell the collector these actions are invoked and they are suppose to stop harrassing you. If you pick up the phone and you do not have legal actions pending just with whatever measure the give out you return it and then hang up
Here is a frustrating legality If you report it stolen and she says you gave it to her then it was officially not stolen, you Will have to take her to court to get it back, in the mean time you are stuck paying for it, unless you can steel it back and return it to the legal owners who don't want it back so long as you keep on paying for it.
Statute of Limitations
No it is never legal. The deciding factor is the dollar amount stolen when you go before the court.
You could call the police and report it stolen.
You need a lawyer to get a legal, correct and current answer.Added: The answer is yes. Selling an item known to be stolen is against the law, and it is against the law if you buy illegal contraband with the proceeds (i.e.: Two charges: onefor dealing in stolen property - two for possession of narcotics.
Check with local law enforcement. They can check the serial number against the NCIC data base for stolen firearms. This is a National database that is NOT available to the general public.
The legal term for a person who initiates a lawsuit against another person for neglectful actions or wrongdoing is a plaintiff.
Armando Montelongo's company is not fraudulent but has had multiple legal actions against it. His legal history includes a theft of service lawsuit and allegations of performing construction work without permits or legal labor.
ALL legal actions?? No, not ALL.
You can seek civil and potentially criminal actions if anyone stops you and frisks you. Contact an attorney with all evidence you have.