Ill personally chop your balls off.
If you commit a crime in one state and flee to another, you can still be prosecuted for the crime in the state where it occurred. Law enforcement agencies in both states can work together to apprehend you and bring you to justice.
extradition
Extradition
if you commit a crime and go to another state, you cant be tried there. however, you can be arrested and extradited back to the state where you commited the crime. if you commit a crime and go to another state, you cant be tried there. however, you can be arrested and extradited back to the state where you commited the crime.
Accessory. Aiding or abetting.
extraditionAdded: They are known as Fugitives From Justice, and they can be extradited, if the state in which they committed the offense wishes to do so.
A crime requires two essential elements. If either one is absent a crime has not occurred. (1) a criminal act accompanied by (2) a criminal intent.
If you were with a person who committed the crime, you are an accessory to a crime. (There are exceptions. It depends on what you mean by the word with. If you were with a person and totally unaware he was going to commit a crime and did nothing to participate in the crime, there may be an exception. I know of one case where a woman discovered she was with a drug dealer. She took her stuff and walked to the bus station and caught a bus. The law left her alone.) It depends on what you knew and when you knew it and what you did about it.
Yes.
He's guilty of bigamy.
Possibly because one coerced the other one into doing it.
Whether a young person may be found guilty of a crime depends upon whether the crime in question is one which requires a heightened level of intent. If a person is really, really young, like two years old, they lack the mental capacity to commit a crime of specific intent. In most jurisdictions it is a fact of law that under the age of 12 is not capable of the mens rea required to commit a crime. More practically speaking, the better question would be "How old does one have to be in order to be prosecuted as an adult?" If that is the question you intended to ask, then the answer depends upon the source of the criminal law allegedly violated. In other words, the answer differs from state to state.