Yes, yes you can, unless you tell his parents or your parents or any adult figure really.
Yes. She will be classified as runaway and if you take her in without telling anyone. You can be charged with harboring a runaway. Parent or not, you are not the custodial parent according to the law.
Report it to the police. That way they will look for him and bring him home and anyone who helps him can be charged with aiding a runaway.
She Runs Away was created in 1997.
u cant get him if he runs away
Yes, or the parents could be charged with kiddnapping a minor.
The record of the fact that they were issued against you, yes. The warrants themselves will either become inactive when they are withdrawn or quashed, or the statute of limitations runs out on the offense you are charged with.
The child will be repporteed as a runaway and anyone who helps her will be charged with aiding a runaway which is a federal crime. The parent she runs to will be charged with kidnapping and lose all parental rights if he does not immidietly send the child back. So if you want a good realtionship with your parents don´t run away. It is also possible they put you in a foster home if they feel you can not live home without running away. No one will trust you if you do this.
I'd recommend talking to your son directly. This is a family issue is it not? A 17 year old runaway problem is a problem that should be solved by the family, not the district attorney. My appologies if that sounds like a value judgement. It's not.
As the alternator runs, it charges the battery.
When a 16 year old in CA runs away he/she will be taken into temporary custody, a check on them run to see if they have broken any laws, taken into the juvenile justice system, and turned over to parents, guardians, custodians, or the court. If it is habitual they may be held or placed by the state.-----------------California law does say the same thing, just a little bit differently."It is not a crime for a juvenile to run away from home in California."See the related Amicus Curiae link listed below, regarding the California Welfare and Institutions Code, particularly Sections 601, 601.5, 625, and 625.1.
i think...It runs away.
The San Andreas Fault runs throughout California down to Baja California, Mexico.