In the British Parliament the official record of what is said and done is called Hansard.
Should the absolute privilege for communications made in judicial or other official proceedings apply to statements made when a citizen contacts the police to report suspected criminal activity? Why or Why not?
It is called the "Hansard"
If they are official reports, they can be called various things including auditors and ombudsman.
It is the Parliamentary equivalent of the Congressional record, a report of the floor debate of the legislature.
Yes. Foreclosure proceedings do not begin in most states until you are a number of months behind in payments. That will negatively impact your credit report. I had foreclosure proceedings begin on my home, but I was able to short sell the home before it went to auction. On my credit report it says, "loan was paid for less than amount owed".
you just report them
John Wilkes
It is a copy with an official stamp certifying that it is a full copy of the report and it is the one filed in the official records.
If it is contained in an 'official' report to law enforcement, yes.
C. S. Tembo has written: 'Action-taken report on the Parliamentary Committee report on [name of subject]' -- subject(s): Economic policy
If foreclosure proceedings were initiated, and that is all that is claimed on the credit report, then the bank cannot change the report. If the credit report shows that the foreclosure took place, however, the bank would have to correct that. Similarly, a credit card company won't take back any delinquent payments reporting just because the card was paid off. They are legally obligated to report accurately.
If the court proceedings were held in juvenile court and resulted in an adjudication instead of a conviction, you do not have to report it as criminal history. This is because the records are sealed and it does not count as a conviction.