Criminal Damage

Criminal Damage

Translate Criminal Damage from English to Spanish

Translation of Criminal Damage, with examples. More about free online translation into Spanish of Daños en propiedad ajena and other legal terms is available here.

Browse

You might be interested in these references tools:

Resource Description
Criminal Damage in the Dictionary Criminal Damage in our legal dictionaries
Related topics Browse topics from the World Wiki Encyclopedia of Law
Browse the Legal Thesaurus Find synonyms and related words of Criminal Damage
Legal Maxims Maxims are established principles that jurists use as interpretive tools, invoked more frequently in international law
Legal Answers (Q&A) A community-driven knowledge creation process, of enduring value to a broad audience
Related topics Criminal Damage in the World Encyclopedia of Law

What is Criminal Damage?

Vocabularies (Semantic Web Information)

<

Resource Description
Topic Map A group of names, occurrences and associations
Topic Tree A topic display format, showing the hierarchy
Sitemap Index Sitemap Index, including Taxonomies
https://legaldictionary.lawin.org/criminal-damage The URI of Criminal Damage (more about URIs)

Criminal damage in Law Enforcement

Main Entry: Law Enforcement in the Legal Dictionary. This section provides, in the context of Law Enforcement, a partial definition of criminal damage.

Resources

See Also

  • Law Enforcement Officer
  • Policeman
  • Law Enforcement Agency

Further Reading

English Legal System: Criminal Damage

In the context of the English law, A Dictionary of Law provides the following legal concept of Criminal Damage : The offence of intentionally or recklessly destroying or damaging any property belonging to another without a lawful excuse. It is punishable by up to ten years’ imprisonment. There is also an aggravated offence, punishable by a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. of damaging property (even one’s own) in such a way as to endanger someone’s life, either intentionally or recklessly. Related offences are those of threatening to destroy or damage property and of possessing anything with the intention of destroying or damaging property with it.

See also arson.


Posted

in

, ,

by

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *