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| An act in violation of the law. Also, a guilty act. |
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| A statement or contention by an individual charged with a crime that he or she was so distant when the crime was committed, or so engaged in other provable activities, that his or her participation in the commission of that crime was impossible. |
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| In some jurisdictions, a rule of law that holds that a person can only defend a third parth under circumstances & only to the degree that the third party could legally act on his or her own behalf. |
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| The facts surrounding an event. |
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| The body of judicial precedent, historically built on legal reasoning & past interpretations of statutory laws, that serve as a guide to decision making, especially in the courts. |
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| The branch of modern law that governs relationships between parties. |
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| Law originating from usage & custom rather than from written statutes. The term refers to an unwritten body of judicial opinion, originally developed by English courts, that is based on nonstatutory customs, traditions, & precedents that help guide judicial decision making. |
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| The coexistence of (1) an act in violation of the law & (2) a culpable mental state. |
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| The facts that show that a crime has occurred. The term literally means "the body of the crime". |
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| The body of rules & regulations that define & specify the nature of & punishments for offenses of a public nature or for wrongs committed against the state or society. Also called penal law. |
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| Behavior in which a person fails to reasonably perceive substantial & unjustifiable risks of dangerous consequences. |
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| Defense (To a Criminal Charge) |
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| Evidence & arguments offered by a defendant & his or her attorney to show why the defendant should not be held liable for a criminal charge. |
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| A defense based on claims of a mental condition that may be insufficient to exonerate the defendant of guilt but that may be relevant to specific mental elements of certain crimes or degrees of crime. |
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| A common law & constitutional prohibition against a second trial for the same offense. |
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| In a specific crime, one of the essential features of that crime, as specified by law or statute. |
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| An improper or illegal inducement to crime by agents of law enforcement. Also, a defense that may be raised when such inducements have occurred. |
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| The "gathering, transmitting, or losing" of information related to the national defense in such a manner that the information becomes available to enemies of the United States. |
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| A legal defense in which the defendant claims that some personal condition or circumstance at the time of the act was such that he or she should not be held accountable under the criminal law. |
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| Latin for "after the fact." The Constitution prohibits the enactment of ex post facto laws, which make acts committed before the laws in question were passed punishable as crime. |
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| A criminal offense punishable by death or by incarceration in a prison facility for at least one year. |
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| Guilty but Mentally Ill (GBMI) |
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| A verdict, equivalent to a finding of "guilty", that establishes that the defendant, although mentally ill, was in sufficient possession of his or her faculties to be morally blameworthy for his or her acts. |
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| An offense not yet completed. Also, an offense that consists of an action or conduct that is a step toward the inteded commission of another offense. |
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| Incompetent to Stand Trial |
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| In criminal proceedings, a finding by a court that, as a result of mental illness, defect, or disability, a defendant is incapable of understanding the nature of the charges & proceedings against him or her, of consulting with an attorney, & of aiding in his or her own defense. |
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| A minor violation of state statute or local ordinance punishable by a fine or other penalty or by a specified, usually limited, term of incarceration. |
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| A legal defense based on claims of mental illness or mental incapacity. |
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| The philosophy of law. Also, the science & study of the law. |
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| A legal defense in which the defendant admits to committing the act in question but claims it was necessary in order to avoid some greater evil. |
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| A rule of conduct, generally enacted in the form of a statute, that proscribes or mandates certain forms of behavior. |
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| A legally recognizable cause. A legal cause must be demonstrated in court in order to hold an individual criminally liable for causing harm. |
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| The state of mind that accompanies a criminal act. Also, a guilty mind. |
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| An offense punishable by incarceration, usually in a local confinement facility, for a period whose upper limit is prescribed by a statute in a given jurisdiction, typically one year or less. |
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| A rule for determining insanity, which asks whether the defendant knew what he or she was doing or whether the defendant knew that what he or she was doing was wrong. |
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| A person's reason for committing a crime. |
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| A violation of the criminal law. Also, in some jurisdictions, a minor crime, such as jaywalking, that is sometimes described as ticketable. |
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| The written, organized, & compiled form of the criminal laws of a jurisdiction. |
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| A legal principle that ensures that previous judicial decisions are authoritatively considered & incorporated into future cases. |
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| A defense that claims that the defendant was in some significant way discriminated against in the justice process or that some important aspect of official procedure was not properly followed in the investigation or prosecution of the crime charged. |
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| The part of the law that specifies the methods to be used in enforcing substantive law. |
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| A degree of force that is appropriate in a given situation & is not excessive. Also, the minimum degree of force necessary to protect oneself, one's property, a third party, or the property of another in the face of a substantial threat. |
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| Activity that increases the risk of harm. |
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| The maxim that an orderly society must be governed by established principles & known codes that are applied uniformly & fairly to all of its members. |
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| The protection of oneself or of one's property from unlawful injury or from the immediate risk of unlawful injury. Also, the justification that the person who committed an act would otherwise constitute an offense reasonably believed that the act was necessary to protect self or property from immediate danger. |
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| A legal principle that requires that, in subsequent cases on similar issues of law & fact, courts be bound by their own earlier decisions & by those of higher courts having jurisdiction over them. The term literally means "standing by decided matters." |
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| Written or codified law; the "law on the books", as enacted by a government body or agency having the power to make laws. |
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| Liability without fault or intention. Strict liability offenses do not require mens rea. |
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| The part of the law that defines crimes & specific punishments. |
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| A wrongful act, damage, or injury not involving a breach of contract. Also, a private or civil wrong or injury. |
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| A U.S. citizen's actions to help a foreign government overthrow, make war against, or seriously injure the United States. Also, the attempt to overthrow the government or the society of which one is a member. |
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