In most jurisdictions, a seven year old may not be charged at all (no charge, no sentence). However, the parents or responsible caregiver may be charged with a crime. A seven year old is considered too young to be left unattended and therefor should not have an opportunity to become intoxicated or to drive a car.
A 17-year-old charged with DWI and vehicular homicide in Florida could face severe penalties, including a possible prison sentence of up to 15 years for vehicular homicide and additional penalties for the DWI charge. The exact sentence would depend on the circumstances of the case and the judge's discretion.
It depends on the state and county you live in. Homicide is a state crime, so it varies.Since he/she is 17, he may be charged as an adult. Even if charged as a child, they may be in jail for about 1 year for DWI and about 5 years for the homicide. Once again, it depends on your state.The juvenile could be tried and sentenced in juvenile or Family Court, or can be transferred to adult court where he could receive time in prison.
Normally the felony would get a harsher sentence but there are a lot of other factors that can be taken into consideration. Since you are not being specific, I can't address your case but some of those factors could be that Sally has a long record and Bob does not or someone was hurt by Sally but no personal injury was involved with Bob's case.
It is unfair that some employees receive preferential treatment based on personal relationships with the boss.
contact the person named as the executor (the person responsible for seeing that the will is probated). He / she is charged with the fiduciary duty to insure that all aspects of the will are carried out according to the wishes of the deceased person.
A 17-year-old charged with DWI and vehicular homicide in Florida could face severe penalties, including a possible prison sentence of up to 15 years for vehicular homicide and additional penalties for the DWI charge. The exact sentence would depend on the circumstances of the case and the judge's discretion.
The same sentence an 18-year-old would receive.
It depends on the state and county you live in. Homicide is a state crime, so it varies.Since he/she is 17, he may be charged as an adult. Even if charged as a child, they may be in jail for about 1 year for DWI and about 5 years for the homicide. Once again, it depends on your state.The juvenile could be tried and sentenced in juvenile or Family Court, or can be transferred to adult court where he could receive time in prison.
6th Amendment
In some cases, up to life in incarceration (life sentence)
Answers vary!
the quickest qualification you can get is a doctor, homicide detective or screenplay writer.
When you will receive papers is not a complete sentence. It is a fragment.
Not enough information is given in order to answer. If it was a first offense and the injuries (if any) were slight you COULD receive probation or a sentence of community service -OR- if you have a record and/or a tough judge you could receive jail time up to a year.
I can receive many things from people.
In Kentucky, harassment is characterized as a misdemeanor. If charged with harassment, a person can receive up to three months in jail.
That is a matter for the court of the country to decide