If you have not been convicted, you are NOT a felon.
If you were charged and convicted of a Misdemeanor offense, yes. If you were charged and convicted of a Felony, no.
If the investigators can prove you stole it, you can be charged and convicted.
If you have been charged but not convicted, it would depend on the terms of your bond. If you are convicted for domestic violence battery, you are prohibited from carrying a firearm.
Being charged is not the same as being convicted. A person who has been charged might still be found innocent of the crime of which he or she has been charged. However, if you have been charged and also convicted of aggravated assault, that is a serious crime and it would involve jail time.
That is not possible, you must be arrested, charged and have a trial before you can be convicted of a crime.
True
Mainly so that you don't break it unintentionally. Not knowing that you did something wrong will not protect you from possibly being accused, charged and convicted of a crime.
No. These are two separate actions. "Charged" is accusation of a crime, such as in a formal arraignment. "Convicted" is found guilty of a crime, by a jury or judge in a court of law or adminstrative proceeding.
if there are no other cases, then NO
Lee Harvey Oswald was charged, but killed in a shootout. Nobody was ever convicted.
They were charged with robbing a Braintree Mass bank and killing a police officer.K