So the funds within that account cannot be withdrawn or transferred or in any manner changed.
NO your Money will be deposited into a escrow account by your attorney. An escrow account is an account that your attorney name and your name is on that account. To make any withdrawal from tha account have to made by your attorney. You can close that account once that attoney receive their cost. but to close that account you are basically firing or relieving that attorney.
In this state you would go before the judge for an arraignment. You would consult with the judge concerning an attorney before you would be allowed to enter a plea. You would be not allowed to enter a guilty plea until you had either consulted with an attorney or waived your right to consult with an attorney. You would be informed that the state would appoint you an attorney if you can not afford one. (They do not inform you he will be just out of law school and not have any idea what he is doing.)
The District Attorney or the innocent person's attorney would be concerned. The judge or magistrate in the case would be concerned as well.
A power of attorney represents a living person, so any power of attorney is no longer valid. They would have to be on the bank account or the executor to legally take the money out.
You can have a joint account with your mother. You do not need a Power of Attorney to manage the account because it belongs to you as the co-owner. You do not need to be listed as the beneficiary on the account because it belongs to you as the co-owner.A Power of Attorney would empower you to act on your mother's behalf in all her business and legal matters except writing her will. You should consult with an attorney if your mother is thinking of doing some estate planning. The attorney could review her situation and explain her options.
Yes, you can request a different judge. You have to have valuable reasoning why you want a new judge and you will also need to have the DA accept the change. This all depends on what state that you live in also.
If the judge makes you pay a fine
People can dispute whatever they want. But, assuming the power of attorney was for you if you become incapacitated or incompetent and named your mother as your power of attorney in that instance, she'll lose if she disputes it. You can name whomever you want as your power of attorney and no judge anywhere would rule otherwise.
Blocking the number has to be done through Verizon, so you would have to call them or log on to their website and block it in your account.
A successful close to a judge typically means that the attorney effectively summarized their case, highlighted key points, addressed counterarguments, and left a lasting impression that supports their position. It should leave the judge feeling confident in the attorney's argument and evidence presented.
The easiest way to expunge a misdemeanor is to petition a judge. It would help to get an attorney. Misdemeanors are not like felonies which are hard to expunge.
No, you'd probably go to jail, unless you had an attorney work out a deal with the district attorney.