Yes. you can be charged as an accessory and you can also be charged with conspiracy, which conspiracy carries more time.
If someone punches you in the face, he or she will be arrested for harassment and being a public nuisance.
Yes. It is someone 'running from the law'.
Uh...no. Not that i know of. It doesn't say anywhere that he is a peidophile and if he was he'd probably be arrested by now. EDIT: You won't get arrested by being a peidophile. You will get arrested if you have sex with children. It would be freaking dumb if you would get arrested for being peidophile. It's like being arrested for being gay. It's something you're born with.
Ex-Post Facto
Criticizing the government is not a crime, and I have never seen an example (at least in modern times) of one being arrested for having an opinion on the government. So, in order for me to give anymore of a legitimate answer, you will have to provide me with an example of someone being arrested for nothing more than expressing their opinion.
THEY ARE TELLING YOU THAT WHAT THEY JUST SAID ISN'T PERSONAL, THEY JUST SAID IT BECAUSE THEY ARE BEING HONEST. BUT IT HAS NOTHING TO DO WIT SOMETHING YOU DID TO THEM.THEIR TRING TO TELL YOU TO STOP DOING SOMETHING BUT NO HARD FEELINGS.
No, you are innocent until proven guilty Yes, you could be arrested for looking like you've been doing something. This is called : Being in the wrong place at the wrong time..
The suffix in the word "kinship" is "-ship", which denotes a state or condition of being related to someone or something.
To make someone else feel like nothing. It means you are basically attacking them for something that they are or suspected of being.
The quietest sound in the world is generally considered to be around 0 decibels, which is the threshold of human hearing. At this level, the sound would be so faint that it would be very difficult, if not impossible, to perceive.
Nothing at all. There is absolutely nothing you can be charged with for being with someone in possession of marijuana.
nothing until proven innocent in the court of law