That's a good point too.Damn wait until the college finds out you weren't a resident of idaho and wants it's back non resident fees too.
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I’m curious how they even felt the need to investigate if you didn’t have resident licenses simultaneously in more than one state.
At the minimum, they could withhold the OP’s degree.Damn wait until the college finds out you weren't a resident of idaho and wants it's back non resident fees too.
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Are you saying you can live in one state for 11 months a year yet claim residency in another? Try getting a judge to believe that.
Very likely. The out of state billing address can be easily cross referenced with county assessor's info. If your name shows up as an owner at the address, they start digging.A likely trigger is an out of state credit card billing address. Assuming they don't have credit cards and bills mailed to a school bus but rather the house in WA.
I’m sure the outcome would be better if he’d hung up the phone.First off why are you even talking to someone on the phone who claims to be a warden. But if it turns out to legit, I doubt it's worth fighting. Admit your honest mistake and get it over with.
Get a lawyer. At least talk to one before determining you can't afford it. If your father-in-law was generous enough to put your name on the deed to the WA property, maybe he can loan you enough to pay the lawyer. (BTW, if he thinks putting your and your wife's name on the deed is helpful for tax purposes, I think he needs a better tax advisor.)I’m new here and would love to pick your collective brains on an issue I just ran into.
I thought that would have been a bigger red flag to agencies until I was in the military and saw a lot of (legal) crazy residency (and multiple residency) situations that never got flagged for the AD member or their family piggybacking on the same benefit. Now I'm curious how much info they have access to without probable cause. The only time I saw someone get in trouble was when a newb picked up a resident fishing license on TDY by accident, but it got dropped out of pity more than anything else because he paid more for an annual resident license than he could have for a 3 day non-res.A likely trigger is an out of state credit card billing address. Assuming they don't have credit cards and bills mailed to a school bus but rather the house in WA.
They wouldnt need access to much. Your name, address, all of that is public information. Run a check against names on R licenses and land/home tax records. Flag the ones that have conflicting results and go from there.I thought that would have been a bigger red flag to agencies until I was in the military and saw a lot of (legal) crazy residency (and multiple residency) situations that never got flagged for the AD member or their family piggybacking on the same benefit. Now I'm curious how much info they have access to without probable cause. The only time I saw someone get in trouble was when a newb picked up a resident fishing license on TDY by accident, but it got dropped out of pity more than anything else because he paid more for an annual resident license than he could have for a 3 day non-res.
I thought that would have been a bigger red flag to agencies until I was in the military and saw a lot of (legal) crazy residency (and multiple residency) situations that never got flagged for the AD member or their family piggybacking on the same benefit. Now I'm curious how much info they have access to without probable cause. The only time I saw someone get in trouble was when a newb picked up a resident fishing license on TDY by accident, but it got dropped out of pity more than anything else because he paid more for an annual resident license than he could have for a 3 day non-res.
Not real common but you can be a non resident in all 50 states with regard to a hunting license.
Tons of people own second homes, doesn’t make them a resident.Name on a house doesn't mean squat.