If you are being charged with a crime, by the State, then yes, they will look for evidence. There may be a ton of evidence, or there may just be a little. Either way, they are likely to find it.
CSI certifications mean you are certified to be a crime scene investigator and are approved by the state to work as a CSI and investigate crime scenes.
Bank robbery is a federal offense in the United States, which means that the FBI has jurisdiction to investigate. It is also a crime under state laws, which means that local and state police departments can also investigate it.
There are a lot of "It Depends" possibilities here, but if the crime crosses state lines in the US, the FBI will be involved.
CSI certifications mean you are certified to be a crime scene investigator and are approved by the state to work as a CSI and investigate crime scenes.
Yes,a state police can investigate a state case.
How long you have to charge someone with forgery depends on the statute of limitations in your state. Typically you have one to three years to file charges, but in some cases you may have up to five years.
Investigating state crime is crucial because it holds those in power accountable for their actions and prevents abuse of power. It helps expose corruption, human rights violations, and societal injustices perpetrated by governments or government officials. By understanding state crime, criminologists can work towards creating a more just and equitable society.
If you have not committed a crime in the state you live in, then no you can't be charged twice of the same offense. That would be double jepordy, and is against the law. Your home state CAN hold you until the state you committed the crime in either extradites you or drops the chargesAdded: The above answer seems unclear.If you committed a crime in state "A" and then committed the same crime in state "B" then BOTH states can charge you seperately, because you committed a separate crime in each state.If you committed a crime only in state "A" but then fled to state "B," state "B" cannot try you for a crime you committed in another state. HOWEVER they can hold you in jail until state "A" comes for you to return you to state "A" for prosecution .
Definitely a felony crime. You don't say what the specific charge is - you will have research your state's statutes to determine the penalty for the crime you are charged with.
No. A DWAI charge is considered a traffic violation, not a crime.
The regulations vary substantially from state to state. But domestic violence is one major crime that can keep you from teaching.
If the facts or scenario involved are applicable to the offense, and the crime is a violation of state law, yes, they could be. (e.g.: A person charged with committing a federal hate crime for assaulting a protected minoirty - and the charge against them was dismissed - the state could then, theoretically, charge the defendant under a more specifically worded state statute - assault.)