Yes, if there was no conviction, and the deferred adjudication is not still pending.
No. Not until a final adjudication.
nope but it is a misdemeanor
If, by your committing perjury, tampering with evidence, or tampering/altering a government document, you changed the outcome of the legal proceeding and caused a 'gross miscarriage of justice' (i.e.- caused a guilty party to be acquited, or an innocent party to be convicted) there are no statutory limitations on your culpability.
felony because the prescription becomes a controlled substance after you tamper with it,and then you get caught for possession too.
Yes. Malicious tampering with government property.
Examples of tampering with evidence include altering or destroying physical evidence, planting false evidence, fabricating documents or witness statements, and withholding or concealing evidence that could be crucial to a case.
how do i report mail tampering and who to. is there a laws against mail tampering
The Anti-Tampering Act deals with the offense of tampering with consumer products.
Well, that depends on what kind of documents they are. If they are documents that someone else might need, or documents that prove your guilt in a case in court, then no, it is not legal to do so.
Yes, it does. Any modifications,removeal or tampering with it can result in a fine or imprisionment.jd1709
You should probably contact an attorney. (If the documents include letters addressed to you but sent to her address, then she's tampering with the mails, which is a federal crime; complain about it to your postmaster and someone will straighten her out on that score right quick.)
tampering (unauthorized altercation) of mail that does not belong to you