Yes you can retrieve personal belongings from your car if it gets repossessed. By law you are allowed 7 days after your car gets repossessed to retrieve your personal belongings.
It depends on where you are. In most states, no there is no requirement for that, but they do have to let you come retrieve your personal belongings later.
Yes, you can typically retrieve your personal belongings after being kicked out of a house, but the process may vary depending on local laws and the circumstances of your eviction. It's advisable to communicate with the landlord or property owner to arrange a time for pickup. If there are disputes or if access is denied, legal assistance may be necessary to ensure you can recover your belongings legally. Always document your interactions and any items you retrieve for your records.
The owner of the vehicle has to pay the fees and than you can get your belongings from the owner.
If the search warrant is for the entire premises, and you, or your belongings, are in "the premises," yes, your personal belongings can be searched.
They don't charge you to get your personal belongings back... they charge you a "storage fee" for the time they stored your personal belongings. And yes, they can do that.
For the most part you can. You can retrieve personal belongings. This means like your library books, cell phone, a firearm, tennis shows, or your child's car seat. However, if something has been added to the car, you cannot. If you are wanting to get back expensive speakers, specialty lights, or an in-dash GPS, you can't. That is now part of the car, and not a personal belonging.
You will need to speak to the police to retrieve your belongings. An attorney could help even more to get your belongings back.
Yes, pictures of people and personal belongings are often used in Voodoo.
A prison cell typically contains a bed, a toilet, a sink, and sometimes a desk or shelf. Inmates may also have personal belongings within their cell, such as clothing, books, and hygiene products.
Yes, you can store your personal belongings in the attic as long as it is safe and appropriate for the items you want to store.
Unless the child actually bought them, they have no personal belongings.