Depends on the specific felony. Some crimes do not have a statute of limitations (e.g., murder).
Manslaughter is normally charged as a felony. West Virginia has no statute of limitations for felony charges. They can bring them at anytime during the accused's lifetime.
Arson is a felony in Michigan. They have set the limitation at six years.
North Carolina has no felony statute of limitations. In other words, if they find out you have committed a felony at any time of your life, they can bring charges. It is one of seven states like this.
3 years for all drug charges.
It would probably be considered a misdemeanor in Missouri. That would have a one year statute of limitations.
In Indiana, the statute of limitations for a misdemeanor Operating While Intoxicated is two years, and for a felony it is five years. The State may file charges at any time until the Statute of Limitations has run.
It would normally depend on whether it was a felony or a misdemeanor. But Michigan does not differentiate. Perjury would be set at 6 years, not including time in which they are not living in the state.
It depends entirely on the state and that state's statute which defines the Statute of Limitations for criminal offenses.
In Alabama Arson is a felony. As such there is no statute of limitations.
A felony in West Virginia has no limitation. They can bring charges at any time in the future.
The statute of limitations is the time limit that the state has to initially file charges. In felony cases in California, including section 422, the statute of limitations is three years under normal circumstances.
There is no statute of limitations for arson in Kentucky. In Ohio, the statute of limitations is 20 years. In Indiana there is no statute of limitations if it is charged as a class A felony, but if charged as a lesser felony the statute is 5 years.