i dont see why he could, i mean if it is against policy i mean i guess he could, but he himself could not unless he was the owner.
dont quote me on that tho.
Yes. Otherwise, how would they get their money, what check should they deduct it from?
a check
yes i would deduct money to my child.
Yes, especially if the equipment was originally checked out to you and you signed a responsibility paper for it.
Dye pack, photos, finger prints, where they spend money, tire tred patern, eye witnesses, marked money or recorded numbers of the money. voice identification, notes.
The Treasury Department prints money. It is part of the Executive Branch.
It prints it!
Not only can you not deduct it, you might be required to pay a special "gift tax" on it.You can deduct money given to certain types of charities, but anything earmarked for a particular person cannot be deducted.
ONLY if they were included as income on a paycheck somehow. YOU CAN NOT DEDUCT MONEY YOU DIDN'T MAKE. There is a lot of money you didn't make. The money is NOT taxable, not tax deductible. (If you paid tax on it and didn't receive it, then you could deduct it...basically because you overpaid, not because you under-earned!
A Currency Printer
Yes, the prints will fade but it is unlikely that they will fingerprint the purse. Unless a large amount of money is involved most agencies do not have the resources to take, classify and research fingerprints.
No