You quilifling person has to live with you unless they are a parent and you supported them.
No
yes
This is fraud, which will certainly get your claim denied and could land you in jail.
You can ask a special, nice family member to keep you.
you cannot claim him unless he is physically or mentally disabled. If he is unemployed he can apply for Unemployment Insurance, if he does not qualify he can apply for welfare, with him living at home he will probably get the least amount he is entitled to seeing as he does not have a family to support.
No you can not, it clearly states that the person has too live with you. Its clear that the inmate does not live with you If you are married to an inmate, though, you can file a joint return. You just cannot claim an inmate as a dependent.
Stunk
Yes, a family member can live in a second home, as long as the owner of the second home allows it and there are no legal restrictions preventing it.
Yes but you must be able to claim them even though you gave up the dependency. The child must live with you all year.
fed tax 1/3 of your check with out a dependent ... the other half (state) would depend on what state you live in ...
only if they being used for live stock business
Huh?