Yes, being on camera is a federal offense and can be punishable for up to 10 years in federal prison.
Check the below website to determine if you may qualify if you were convicted of a STATE felony offense. However, if you've been convicted of a FEDERAL offense, the state procedure will not help you. Currently there are no effective procedures in place to expunge federal offense.
A victim is a person directly and proximately harmed as a result of the commission of an offense (i.e.: the one against whom the offense was committed).
No. The reason being - it has not yet entered the US Postal System and is not yet under the protection of Federal Law (US Postal Regulations).
Although there ARE some federal misdemeanors - are you certain that the crime you are charged with is a federal misdemeanor offense, AND/OR that it is being heard in a federal court?If you are, in fact, charged with a federal misemeanor offense, the only thing you can do is file a motion for a change of venue, which would only move it to another US District Court, or file a motion for that particular federal judge recusethemselves from your case which would only have the effect of it being transferred to another federal judge.If you are charged, and to be tried, in federal court, then that is the court of proper jurisdiction, and you cannot get it moved somewhere else.
Ask the US attorney who's handling the case.
It would be most dependent on your past record, the nature of the offense you were convicted of, and your behavior while in max.
18 US 1001 - deals with Fraud and making false statements. It is a Felony offense. 18 US 1003 - deals with making false claims against the United States and is also a Felony offense. Putting the two together leads one to believe that a defendant is being charged wtih making false statements and/or committing fraud to collect money from the federal government.
A possession offense is usually being charged of possessing something illegal in the country you are being charged such as drugs, or paraphernalia (property/images etc...) depending on what the possession is and the amount of what ever it is you are charged with possessing it can be a minor or a federal offense. Possession with intent to distribute can in some places earn you a life sentence or a sentence of death (ex: Thailand).
Offense and Defense. Offense being the team in possesion of the ball.
A flex offense is being more flexible.A motion offense is doing whatever the heck you can.
No. The law against being a felon in possession of a firearm is a federal law.
You can't be tried for the same crime twice; that would be "double jeopardy." If you are found not guilty in state court, you can be tried in federal court for the same incident under a different theory, depriving someone of his civil rights, e.g.