Federal law- 5 years
Federal law- 5 years. No parole
5 yrs
Depends on what the crime was, and for what type of gun. A felon in possession of a firearm violates a Federal law in the US, punished by 5 years in a Federal prison, no probation, no parole.
Yes, a convicted felon can get a sever permit in Georgia. This will have no effect on whether you can serve alcohol or not.
Difficult to answer - too much is unknown. You can be pretty sure that they will be returned to jail/prison to serve the remainder of their original sentence. In the meantime they will be charged and tried for the firearm possession offense, and that sentence will probably be added onto the top of their original sentence. If the felon was charged under the federal statute they could be imprisoned for up to 15 years on the firearm charge alone.
Not likely.
Not necessarily - if your state returned those other two 'rights' to you - - if firearm possession was also included, the documents should say so specifically! Without that SPECIFIC permission you cannot assume your firearms rights were restored. One of the reasons may be: IF you are a convicted FEDERAL felon, you will never regain firarms rights. The US Code currently has no method by which federal felons can regain their firearms rights.
as long as they urinate in it first source ross.wikia.com
If the by-laws of the organization allow it, Yes.
If the by-laws of the organization allow it, Yes.
In most cases, a convicted felon can serve as a trustee of a revocable trust unless there are specific legal restrictions or the terms of the trust prohibit it. However, being a convicted felon may impact the individual's ability to effectively manage trust assets or fulfill their fiduciary duties.
In Kentucky, a convicted felon can serve on a school board only if they have had their voting rights restored. Typically, individuals convicted of certain felonies lose their right to vote and hold public office. However, the restoration of these rights can occur through a pardon from the governor or a specific process for certain offenses. Therefore, a felon must ensure their rights are restored before being eligible to serve on a school board.