If you are referring to depictions of currency printed on the fabric that makes up the item being sold, no, it is not.
The power to coin money is an expressed power. This is a power that is provided to Congress in Article 1, Section 8 of the US Constitution.
The term print means like if you read the paper you can see that it the prof is in the paper is you read it. Another term "it's in the fine print" when they give you the paper to read it in the "fine print".
That will depend on the laws and the jurisdiction. Most states and counties now have web sites with forms available. Check your county website or give them a call to find out the forms that are available. They can also help you get a court date for the hearing.
Fingerprints are very unique. No two are the same, really. So, if your print is on something, and an officer can compare your print and the suspect print, and there is a match, then it is very, very likely that you committed the crime.
There is no requirement.A defendant can be found guilty with no finger print evidence, or a defendant could be found not guilty even with substantial fingerprint evidence.Added: One print, or even a partial print, is sufficient evidence if it contains enough 'points' for conclusive identification.
No
Money would have very little value
Yes
yes it is legal
fabric paint
try kerosine
Arlene L. Eis has written: 'The Legal Researcher's Desk Reference, 1990' 'The Legal Researcher's Desk Reference 2004-05 (Legal Researcher's Desk Reference)' 'Legal Newsletters in Print 2003' 'International mikvah directory' -- subject(s): Directories, Mikveh 'Legal Looseleafs in Print 2003' 'Legal Looseleafs in Print 2007 (Legal Looseleafs in Print)' 'Directory of Law-Related Cd-Roms 2000' 'The Legal Researcher's Desk Reference 1996-97 Supplement' 'Directory of Law-Related Cd-Roms 1996' 'Directory Of Law-Related CD-ROMs 2006' 'Legal Loose-Leafs in Print, 1992' 'Legal Newsletters in Print 1999' 'Directory of Law-related Cd-rom 2007' 'Legal Looseleafs in Print 2004' 'Legal Newsletters in Print 2002' 'The Legal Researcher's Desk Reference, 1992 (Legal Researcher's Desk Reference)' 'Legal Newsletters In Print 2005' 'Legal Looseleafs in Print 1997' 'The Legal Researcher's Desk Reference 2002-03 (Legal Researchers Desk Reference, 2002-2003)' 'Directory Of Law-Related CD-ROMs 2005' 'The Legal Researcher's Desk Reference' 'Legal Looseleaf in Print 2002' 'Legal Looseleafs in Print 2006 (Legal Looseleafs in Print)' 'Legal Newsletters in Print 1996' 'The Legal Researcher's Desk Reference 1998-99/ With Supplement (Legal Researcher's Desk Reference)' 'Directory of Law-Related Cd-Roms 1999'
No, the print and cut matter more than the fabric.
(in the US) No, it is not. By law, only the federal government can issue money.
These are promotional items that so not have a print on them. Your business should have a stigma item for this product to have a use in promotion.
Couches with solid-colored fabric are more popular because printed fabrics create messy looks.
Not all countries print their own money. A country can only print money if it is in control of its currency like Japan and the US. One country that cannot print money is Greece because they are not in control of the Euro.