Want this question answered?
That is not possible, you must be arrested, charged and have a trial before you can be convicted of a crime.
Just impeachment is not a problem. If a President were impeached and convicted and lost his office, he might also lose his pension. This has never happened. It would be up to Congress. The Presidential pension is set by Congress. It is not something the President pays into out his salary. Congress can do whatever it wants with it.
Did the offense occur after retirement? Did it occur while you were employed? Did it occur as a result of your employment? (?????) There definitely ARE circumstances under which you COULD lose your pension rights but there is not enough info given in the question to answer it intelligently.
If Brutus had lived in the present century he would be arrested, convicted and locked up for the rest of his life.If Brutus had lived in the present century he would be arrested, convicted and locked up for the rest of his life.If Brutus had lived in the present century he would be arrested, convicted and locked up for the rest of his life.If Brutus had lived in the present century he would be arrested, convicted and locked up for the rest of his life.If Brutus had lived in the present century he would be arrested, convicted and locked up for the rest of his life.If Brutus had lived in the present century he would be arrested, convicted and locked up for the rest of his life.If Brutus had lived in the present century he would be arrested, convicted and locked up for the rest of his life.If Brutus had lived in the present century he would be arrested, convicted and locked up for the rest of his life.If Brutus had lived in the present century he would be arrested, convicted and locked up for the rest of his life.
You do not lose your rights when you are convicted of a felony. You lose some rights which will be determined by the judge.
Yes, a federal pension can be discontinued for a person convicted of a felony if the crime is related to their employment or if the pension plan has provisions for forfeiture in the case of certain criminal convictions.
Insufficient information is given in the question. Was he arrested for the exact same OFFENSE for which he was convicted, or was he arrested on the same CHARGE for a totally different offense? If he was arrested for the EXACT SAME OFFENSE for which he was convicted he would be in the unconstitutional position of being placed in double jeapordy.
That depends on where you were arrested and if you had any paraphernalia.
I am a policemans widow will I loose my widows pension if i re marry
If you were already retired and collecting the pension, no, it won't be stopped. If you committed the crime and were prosecuted before you retired, yes, it can.
they will be arrested and convicted of a DUI
It depends on why you were arrested. More specifically, it depends on whether you were convicted of a crime, and what you were convicted of. Most misdemeanors will not disqualify you from owning a firearm, but any any felony will.