If you are having intercourse wtih someone who is considered a legal minor in your state, you can be charged the day you become 18. You are then, legally speaking, an adult.
Yes, the odds are very high that they will go to prison, if not for the VOP on the first offense, then probably for committing the 2nd offense.
Committing perjury is an indictable offense rather than a summary offense. A person who commits perjury is always in the position to be indicted when involved in a court case.
Depending on which law you violated when committing your offense (state or federal) you will be charged under the appropriate criminal code, and prosecuted in the appropriate court system.
The same reason it is a significant offense when committed by an adult. It shows a propensity towards violence (which is an indicator that the person will commit a violence offense again). Having a firearm is EXTREMELY dangerous especially when committing a robbery. You have no business robbing people, let alone using a gun to do so. You can be charged as an adult to, depending on the state, sometimes as young as 12 or 13 years old.
You cannot be charged twice for committing the SAME IDENTICAL offense. Which is not to say that you cannot be charged with multiple offenses which you committed during the commission of the same event. OR - if you were once charged and convicted of robbery, if you go out and commit another robbery, it does not mean that you are forever insulated from being charged wtih robbery.
lying to congress
If you committed the same offense, seperately, in each state, you can be charged with each separate crime. You cannot be tried in IL for a crime committed in IN, and conversely, you cannot be tried in IN for a crime committed in IL.
Absolutely. Committing ANY criminal offense is a violation of probation.
Committing fraud against the government is a criminal offense, and you could be charged with (depending on the state) a felony offense (i.e.: defrauding the government).
When you are charged with a federal offense as opposed to a state offense.
If you are charged with a Zero Tolerance offense this means that your driving privilege will be suspended for 1 year for a second or subsequent offense?
In most states DUI can be charged and tried as either a traffic offense OR a criminal offense. It will depend on HOW you were charged.