Yes. Depending on the specifics and the state, it could be a variety of crimes. For instance, "solicitation", which basically means to ask or induce another person to commit a crime. It might also be conspiracy to commit battery. And, accomplice liability might mean that the person who paid the other person was liable as a principal--that is, guilty of battery himself.
If the needle is dirty from someone else's bodily fluid then yes. If it's just dirty in general you should be concerned about tetnus. If it's got someone else's bodily fluids or was in someone else you should also worry about Hepatitis
Yes.. It is the crime of forgery.
when someone else commits a crime and someone else helps them afterward. Even though this person didn't commit the crime, they can still be charged.
a window, a picture, someone else for your crime
It is not a crime by itself. If you try to trick someone by giving a false name while you are committing a crime, then that is different.
No.
someone who investigates a crime scene they dust for fingerprints test for blood look for evidence and everything else associated with crime
someone who investigates a crime scene they dust for fingerprints test for blood look for evidence and everything else associated with crime
It is a federal crime to open someone's FedEx package without their permission. This is considered tampering with mail, which is punishable by fines and imprisonment.
No shut the f*** up
In most cases you are defiling the property of someone else without their consent.
Although you did not actually commit the crime yourself, you DID conspire to commit the crime, and then after the crime was committed by someone else, you did Receive Stolen Propertywhich itself is an offense. The fact that you gave it back, is immaterial - you conspired to have it stolen and deprive the rightful owner of it.