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The Mythology Of Crime And Criminal Justice: Contributing Factors Of Crime

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 4.36
  Total Words: 1091
  Total Characters: 5897
  Number of Sentences: 64


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 17.05
  Characters per Words: 5.41


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 52.36
  Fog Scale Level: 13.53
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 10.19  

The Mythology of Crime and Criminal Justice: Contributing Factors Of Crime


     Crime is defined as:  commission of an act or act of omission that
violates the law and is punishable by the state.  Crimes are considered
injurious to society and the community.  As defined by law, a crime includes
both the act, or actus rea, and the intent to commit the act, or mens rea.
Criminal intent involves an intellectual apprehension of factual elements of the
act or acts commanded or enjoined by the law.  It is usually inferred from the
apparently voluntary commission of an overt act.  Criminal liability is relieved
in the case of insanity.  Legal minors are also relieved of criminal liability,
as are persons subjected to coercion or duress to such a degree as to render the
commission of criminal acts involuntary.   In most countries, crimes are defined
and punished pursuant to statutes.  Punishments may include death, imprisonment,
exile, fines, forfeiture of property, removal from public office, and
disqualification from holding such office.
     Unless the act of which a defendant is accused is expressly defined by
statute as a crime, no indictment or conviction for the commission of such an
act can be legally sustained. This provision is important in establishing the
difference between government by law and arbitrary or dictatorial government.
     Under common law, a crime was generally classified as treason, felony,
or misdemeanor, but many offenses could not be defined exactly, and the rule was
adopted that any immoral act tending to the prejudice of the community was, per
se, a crime, and punishable by the courts.  Crimes are now usually classified as
mala in se, which includes acts, such as murder, so offensive to morals as to be
obviously criminal; and mala prohibita, which are violations of specific
regulatory statutes, such as traffic violations, that ordinarily would not be
punishable in the absence of statutory enactments prohibiting the commissio...

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