Please Help Me On My Case I Need All The Info I Can Get!?
Ok heres the story. I knew my so called buddie was going to steal a boat motor. And he wanted a ride that night he called me saying come get me i pulled to a fence he put the boat motor in my truck. And i took him to his house to get some clothes. And he spent the night with me. I got charged with a Misdemeanor Larceny Class 1 my dad signed me out of the county sheriff's office (I Never had a bail amount) that night the mastery told me and my dad it was not likely for me to go to jail but it could happen. I never got locked up in jail that night i just had cuffs around my feet MY QUESTIONS ARE.. What is the most i will get or can get charged with i never have been in any trouble before! And do i have to be with my dad where ever he goes? The mastery told me i had to do what my dad said long as it wasn't illegall but not that i had to be with him so can i go to town and other places without him as long as i have his permission? The state is North Carolina...County is Greene That all of the charges happened Ive never been in any trouble before expect for a game warden charge andthat'ss been over two years ago on Unsupervised Probation ive been OFF Unsupervised Probation for a year and two months! I got charged with shooting a deer off the ground with a rifle in that county its a county law..and exceeding the daily bag limit for deer.that's a state law
Public Comments
- You knowingly helped a thief. That makes you a thief, they should cut your hands off!
- Get a good lawyer, you have just admitted you knew they were going to steal it, you gave him a ride, he spent the night with you. Obstruction of justice for not reporting it. You gave him a ride ACCESSORY/accomplice, you have had probation before so you can't get a prayer for justice. I'd go to the lawyer tell them everything. Maybe the judge won't be to hard on you, but I do see cases like this that come across the desk everyday. It is possible to have jail time. *edit* How can the mast say you probably won't go to jail? Its the judge that will choose that. A lot of people get jail time for Aiding and abetting. You'll prob want to lay low for a while untill court because if your partying hard it will not impress the judge like it will if you were to be at home studying.
- You can get up to one year in jail. But, don't fret. From what I can tell u are a minor if you were released without bond to your father. If you have no priors and are not currently on probation or supervision you won't go to jail. Definately shell out the four to five hundred dollars on a lawyer tho. And expect community service and possibly a fine. Possibly a fine, but definately community service if convicted. If you don't want to pay for a lawyer, but I Strongly advise you to do so, you can talk to the States attorney, the lawyer for the courts trying to convict you, and tell him or her you would like to plead guilty and ask what punishment they would recommend for you. They will typically give you a lesser punishment if you take this route, because it means they don't have to spend their time and effort to prove their case against you. If you are happy w/ the terms the SA gives you, tell the SA you accept the terms and plead guilty and take the given punishment, probably 40-100 hrs of community service and about one year of supervision. Good Luck.
- Why is it you idiots always say "I've never been in any trouble before except for..." then list where you were actually in trouble before??? You did the crime, be prepared for the punishment. You'll probably just get probation but don't act like you're an innocent bystander and didn't know what was going on. You're 100% guilty. And this won't be the last time. You sound like a real winner
- It is called aiding and abetting. You knowingly helped a crime be committed. If you are a minor, you will be sent to a juvenile prison until you are 18. If you are considered an adult (which I assume you are since you were driving), you can recieve as much as 2 years without probation for a first offense and 5 years if you have a record. North Carolina laws are pretty strict about those guidelines.
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