No.
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.
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.
Criminal justice is the process of bringing an accused person of an offense against the Government before a court to answer those charges, and, if convicted, given the proper punishment for the offense.
You are considered guilty of a crime at the time that you enter the plea - regardless of when sentencing occurs.Added: You are "convicted" of whatever offense you pled to at the moment the judge pronounces the verdict.
No. If you commit a crime while on parole, you will have violated the provisions of your parole and it is almost certain that you will be returned to prison to serve out the term of your original sentence. Additionally, if convicted of the new offense, you will probably have that sentence added to whatever original term you were serving for the first offense.
Many countries do not allow convicted felons to enter with a passport. It is best to contact the country's embassy before traveling. They will best be able to provide the legalities of traveling to their country.
The statute of limitations is different from state to state. Would need to know three things before being able to answer. (1) The state the offense was committed in, and (2) the exact nature of the offense, and (3) did you flee the state to avoid arrest? All that is necessary before being able to give an answer.
In Minnesota anywhere you will lose your driving privilages for Minor Consumption but if it was not while driving, you will have to be convicted in a court of the offense before your license will be suspended. If it was while driving, your license will be suspended immediately. On a first time offense, you will only lose your license for 30 days.
A second or subsequent offense simply is stating that the same offense has occurred before. If you got caught underage drinking before, the next ticket would be under "second or subsequent offense".
There is no such thing as a statute of limitations on a conviction, the statute of limitations refers to the time that can go by before you are accused. In New Jersey, a DWI charge must be issued within 90 days of the alleged offense. In New Jersey, once you have been convicted of DWI, it is a permanent part of your DMV record. However, a first offense will not be considered (for sentencing purposes) if it occurred more than ten years before the second offense.
Ante is the Latin word for before and delictum is Latin for offense. The phrase ante delictum means before the offense.
here in Arkansas all offenses carry jail time stedy goes up till 4th offense where if convicted within 5year period you will go to state pen