You can deported if you are here illegally and not a citizen. A citizen can't be deported from their own country, but they can go to jail for committing a crime.
If you are deported from the United States, you do not lose your 401(k) account. You can generally leave the funds in your 401(k) account and manage it remotely or roll it over to an account in your home country, depending on the rules of your specific situation and plan.
yes, a crime is still a crime, it doesnt matter when it was commited
If you commit a crime, and are not a citizen of the United States, you can be deported, regardless of whether or not your parents are a citizen.
That would be the Defendant.
Someone is accused "of" a crime.
She is not required to answer questions that would force her to confess to a crime.
your father can not get deported because he didn't do the crime. but he also can get deported if he don't have the prove that he didn't do the crime and all he have to do is prove that he didn't do a thing and his all good
Every single one of the US presidents was accused of a crime
If the accused died during the investigation phase, it would not necessarily halt the investigation until it was proven that the accused acted alone in their crime. If the accused died during trial, it would end the trial.
These are rights intended for individuals accused for a crime.
These are rights intended for individuals accused for a crime.
The first thing the Romans did with someone accused of a crime was to give him a trial. Where this trial took place depended on the status of the accused and the type of crime. A petty crime by someone of the lower class would be tried by one of the praetors and if found guilty the man would be fined and set free. A capital crime, such as murder had special courts and if the man were found guilty he could face the death penalty, again depending upon the status of the person he murdered and the circumstances of the crime. However, a man accused of treason or a public official accused of corruption, both of these defendants, usually being of a high status, would be tried before the Senate.