Normally police can hold you for up to 48 hours before having to present you to the court to be formally charged.
24 hours
File charges with the police department or the D.A. Then let your bank know and see if they will not hold you accountble for the checks sence you pressed charges.
In Philadelphia and elsewhere in the United States, anyone being held in custody must appear before a judge within 48 hours. At that time, they are formally charged and the judge will ask them to enter a plea to the charges.
A person with HIV can certainly hold a position as a police officer.
What are you being "held" for? If you are going to be charged and arraigned the time limit is governed by constitutional law. If you are being helf for extradition, then there is no statutory time limit.... as long as the extraditing state is in the process of removing you.
what hapens with that person
Yes. If the person was on parole at the time they were taken into custody by authorities he or she can be detained until it is decided if they have violated the terms of their parole or probation. Typically, a parole hold can only be enforced for a limited amount of time. Some states permit no more than thirty days without new criminal charges, some permit as long as ninety days, with or without new criminal charges.
1 year
YES you can, the recording can hold up as evidence in a court of law if submitted to the police. The only exception is if you are a police officer working a case you have to have court consent similar to a wrrant.
Police Officer Hold. When the police take a person to a facility such as the hospital when they feel they are unstable mentally. usually suicidal people are taken POH.
A person cannot be held in jail without presentation of evidence. They can questioning a person but cannot hold them.
The watch belongs to someone who presumably earned the money to buy it. If they filed a report with the police department, it can be returned to its owner. Some police agencies hold found property like this for a set period, and if it goes unclaimed, it can be returned to the person who found it. If that happened, you would own it lawfully. If you decide to keep it and not give it to the police, you may be in possession of stolen property and liable to criminal charges.