Alabama has a long list of felonies with no set statute of limitations. For those that do, Class C felonies, it is set at 3 years. The statute is met once an indictment or warrant is issued, regardless of whether it can be served immediately or not.
There is no SOL for this crime - see below excerpt.
Felonies: Arson, forgery, any capital offense, counterfeiting, use, attempted use, or threat of violence, felony with serious physical injury/death, any sex offense with one under 16, drug trafficking: Not Applicable
Other felonies: 3 years
See below:
Quoted from the statute:
Murder: none; 10 yrs. for certain violent felonies; felony sexual abuse of a minor: none; other felonies: 5 yrs., any offense that includes fraud or breach of fiduciary obligation, official misconduct in public office: extension 1 year after discovery offense, with a maximum extension of 3 years.
If outside the state in hiding - 3 year extension.
Alabama has a list of felonies, including any felony drug charges, with no set statute of limitations. For those that do it is set at 3 years. The statute is met once an indictment or warrant is issued, regardless of whether it can be served immediately or not.
Each case is different. Hire an attorney or ask your local public defender's office for help.
Georgia limits low level felonies to four years. For higher level crimes it is higher.
In Alabama most felonies have no statute of limitations. A few have a limit of 3 years, so consult the law carefully.
That will depend on the specific felony. Alabama has none on the most serious felonies. Those would be any crime that involved use or threat of violence.
In Alabama drug trafficking is a felony. There is no statute of limitations.
Alabama takes a very time view on drug trafficking. As such, it has no limitation.
Alabama has a long list of felonies, including felony drug charges, with no set statute of limitations. For those that do it is set at 3 years. The statute is met once an indictment or warrant is issued, regardless of whether it can be served immediately or not.
There is no statute of limitations on a felony drug conviction. You were charged and convicted. It is a part of your record forever.
In Kansas, there is a statute of limitations for a felony with drug conviction. The statute of limitations have a grid that divides crimes by severity level and categorizes defendants by their prior criminal records.
Alabama has a long list of felonies, including any felony drug charges, with no set statute of limitations. For those that do it is set at 3 years. The statute is met once an indictment or warrant is issued, regardless of whether it can be served immediately or not.
Massachusetts does have statute of limitations in place. For this felony it would be six years.
I DONT KNOW ASK THE POLICE
3 years for all drug charges.
Yes, California does have statute of limitations for crimes. For a felony it is between 3 and 6 years. For a misdemeanor it is 1 year.
West Virginia's statute of limitations are very basic and simple. They have decided that no statute of limitations shall apply to any felony. That includes drug charges. Misdemeanors that involve petty larceny or perjury are limited to 3 years. All other misdemeanors are set at 1 year.
You need to consult with a criminal attorney. They will know whether the limit has actually expired.