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.
You cannot get out of testifying in court just because you don't want to do it. If you feel unsafe about it, you can talk to the judge about it.
Once you are subpoenaed you can not get out of it.
Report it to your local police and try and get some proof of how and who is doing it.
The guideline for expert witness testimony at the Court is 'Testifying in Court: Guidelines and Maxims for the Expert Witness'. Stanley L. Brodsky is the author of this book.
Yes, so the other person can defend themselves through their lawyer
Generally speaking, a witness. They can be a witness for the defense or a witness for the prosecution in a criminal case. They can be a witness for the defense or a witness for the plaintiff in a civil case. If they are testifying in behalf of someone they would rather be testifying against, they are called a "hostile witness." NOTE: This question would be better to have been asked under the Legal or Law category so I will move it there.
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Sorry. The question makes no sense. Individuals do not press charges, nor can they bring someone to court for making terrorist threats. That can only be done by law enforcement and the state prosecutors office.
Don't think so. He is going to spend most of the rest of his life testifying in court.
She is not required to answer questions that would force her to confess to a crime.
If you file charges against your husband for bigamy charges, then the same court will grant you a annulment.
It does not cost anything to file contempt charges at the court house. It will cost you if you have an attorney to file the charges for you.