No, I have never unknowingly sold stolen property.
Yes, if you can determine who it was sold to, or who bought it, and if you can identify it to the satisfaction of law enforcement and the court, it can be confiscated from whoever bought it and returned to you.
was california stolen by european
No. That property was no longer owned by the decedent if it was sold for unpaid property taxes.No. That property was no longer owned by the decedent if it was sold for unpaid property taxes.No. That property was no longer owned by the decedent if it was sold for unpaid property taxes.No. That property was no longer owned by the decedent if it was sold for unpaid property taxes.
Stolen bikes are typically sold on online marketplaces, at pawn shops, and in underground markets.
when the property is sold of course.
There are two crimes - possibly three. (1) the theft (2) transporting the property across state lines (3) knowingly disposing of stolen property (fencing). The state that the theft occurred in could prosecute you for that. The state that the items were sold in could prosecute you for that. If the item concerned qualifies under federal law, the feds could prosecute you for taking it across state lines.
They sold it to worthy buyers. They sold many for a high price.
I don't thing so. The identity can not be sold or bought. It can be only stolen like telephone number and the when the steal is revealed, the thief is punished and must compensate the damage caused.
Pawn shops are a legitimate business, and tightly regulated under state and Federal laws. To pawn anything, you will have to provide them with your ID. If a firearm has been reported to the police as stolen, information on that gun will be entered in the NCIC computer system. When you sell that stolen gun to the pawn shop, and they enter it into their inventory, the computer system recognizes it as a stolen firearm. You get visited by the police who arrest you for possession of stolen property.
Yes, you definitely could. And after you get arrested for receiving stolen property, you will have to produce evidence or a believable explanation why you didn't know it was stolen when you bought it. If someone offers you a deal that sounds too good to be true. . . BELIEVE IT. . . it usually IS. -------------------------- Really? I think you got it backwards your accuser has to prove you DID know it was stolen. In America it is innocent until proven guilty. Or that is the way it is supposed to be at least. Offer to take a polygraph test and tell the authorities who sold it to you. Then after you are found innocent celebrate by you and a couple of your friends paying a visit to your accusers house and beat them over the head with a baseball bat For lying about you. Okay you may get in trouble for the baseball bat part but are there any lawyers out there that can tell me if I am right about the first part?
no, she was stolen when she was 12 years old
If the liens predate the lease then the property will likely be sold to satisfy the creditors.If the liens predate the lease then the property will likely be sold to satisfy the creditors.If the liens predate the lease then the property will likely be sold to satisfy the creditors.If the liens predate the lease then the property will likely be sold to satisfy the creditors.