Okay, I believe SOL doesn't start until last activity. In debt cases that would be the last day your account is active.
If you are talking about Tupac Shakur, it's been said that the SOL will be hit in 2014 making it impossible for him to be prosecuted for faking his death, which is illegal by the way.
For personal injury, medical malpractice, and wrongful death in Indiana the statute of limitations is two years.
For personal injury, medical malpractice, and wrongful death in Louisiana the statute of limitations is one year.
The statutes of limitations limits the time a person can be prosecuted for a given crime. The statute of limitations for a fake ID in Minnesota is 3 years.
Yes, all states have statutes of limitations for charging various offenses. Check your own state statutes for the limitations (if any) in your state.
5 years
There are no statutes of limitations for being in prison as a felon: either you are sentenced to death, to life, an indeterminate amount of time (e.g., 10 to 20, 25 years to life), or a specific sentence the court has imposed, minus any lawful release incentives.
There is no statute of limitations on fines. In other words you are SOL.
Unfortunately it is seven years.
It is called Statute of Limitations.
There is no statutes of limitations of medical bills. You still need to pay your bills when you are billed, regardless of when they were incurred.
Four years from date of discovery of illness or injury for personal injury cases, two years for wrongful death cases, two years from date of discovery of illness or injury for medical malpractice, and four years for consumer liability. The article below goes into more detail on statutes of limitations.
Statutes of limitations apply to torts or criminal acts, not to objects. Statutes of limitations vary by state, between state and federal law, and by offense, among other things.