You Betchya behind it is.
Yes. Vandalism is a criminal offense.
Under the ex post facto rule, you cannot be charged with a criminal offense if it was not a criminal offense at the time you committed it. By the same token, if you committed a criminal offense that has since been repealed (meaning this is no longer a criminal offense) you still are considered having a criminal record for that offense.
Probably not, especially if you were under active prosecution for a criminal offense in your home country.
The criminal charge applied to this offense would be Homicide.
In some states multiple DUI offenses ARE grounds for a criminal charge.
The charge is the same whether it's your first offense or your fifth offense. If will be some type of Larceny offense. Possibly 'Embezzlement,' if the money order's were actually entrusted to you by trust.
If it was a criminal charge, and it was committed after your 18th birthday, it will always appear.
They can be depending on the severity of the charge and the jurisdiction in which the offense was committed.
Insufficient information given with which to answer. Federal charge? State charge? Quantity of narcotics? Type of narcotics? The charge will never become "insufficient," but there may be a 'statute of limitations' on the offense, after the expiration of which, you cannot be charged. The bad news on that is, the time limit stops if you flee out of state.
If you were found not guilty, your charge was dismissed, or you were found guilty, the charge will remain on your record until you seek to have it expunged.
It is a criminal offense and the defendant must appear in court to plead to the charge.
Yes. The charge may stem or arise from the same or similar offense, but the facts could be used to support a criminal charge in the same, or another, jurisdiction. Think the OJ Simpson case. He was found not guilty of the criminal offense, but guilty of the civil charge. ALSO - defendants have been found not guilty in state or federal courts of an offense, but then are charged by the Feds with... say.... civil rights violations, or some such.