If you were taken into custody with the intent to be interrogated then yes, the charges could be dropped.
When a person is arrested there is a procedure that has to be followed and if due process is not followed the charges maybe dropped. The Miranda decision is a good example of this.
I can't possibly see why you wouldn't be.
because he used streoids and hgh pills but the charges got dropped
If indeed the charges were dropped, no.
If your husband was arrested for a battery-domestic charge and an onsite police report was taken and it was false, you can fight it in court. This will be the only way to get the charges dropped depending on what state you are in.
Once an arrest has been made, the charges can be dropped only by the prosecutor's office. The police cannot withdraw the charge.
Yes and No, No. not legally, resisting arrest is what they say when they have no other charges to pin on you. but yes as it happens all the time but charges are always dropped
When a person is in the United States on a work visa and is arrested with the charges dropped, forcing them to leave due to the expiration of the visa, they are able to come back to the United States. The court in which the case was heard should provide documentation that all charges were dropped so there is no difficulty with obtaining another work visa.
It means one has been arrested for a crime and then the charges were dropped before the case got to court. Or one has been arrested faced court and was found to be not guilty.
When charges are dropped then you are free to go
No, the charges will not be dropped unless you are the only complainasnt and the only witness. The person arrested will have a permanent arrest record on their criminal history anyway.
Three players on the current roster have a criminal record. Kevin Faulk: Arrested on a misdemeanor marijuana charge in Lafayette, La. in 2008 Randy Moss: Arrested in 2004, while a member of the Minnesota Vikings, on two charges - Felony charge of Suspicion of Assault with a Deadly Weapon (a car) and a misdemeanor charge of Possession of Marijuana. The felony charge was dropped, and he pled guilty to a misdemeanor traffic violation. Nick Kaczur: Arrested in 2008 for possession of Illegal Prescription Drugs (Oxycodone). He cooperated with a DEA Investigation, and no charges were filed.