Too many to list them all. One of the best known cases would be Scott Peterson of Modesto, CA, who murdered his wife and unborn child. He now sits on San Quentin's death row. No DOE (date of execution) has been set.
No. Your spouse can receive them and you can receive them, but you have no right to theirs.
Not in my opinion. Technically no...but if your spouse or "significant other" catches you doing it with anyone else, the penalty is the same.
If the spouse is not a Jehovah's Witness, i.e like every other non-Witness, then yes of course they don't need anyone's allowance whether they can or cannot receive gifts at birthdays or Christmas.
No. Your spouse can receive them and you can receive them, but you have no right to theirs.
If you marry anyone, you become his (or her) spouse.
Yes they receive the check from there spouse.
No. A widow or widower can only receive survivor benefits if the spouse was employed or self-employed, paid FICA taxes, and accumulated sufficient work credits.
Your spouse's income is not a factor.
no not at the min.
Not directly. The spouse that receives the inheritance can determine what is done with that inheritance. There is no automatic right for the other spouse to receive any of it.
If the individual was married than their spouse will receive the inheritance. If there is no spouse, then the children is next in line, followed by grandchildren.
yes if they do something horrible like killing someone