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Civil Vs. Criminal People vs People Tort/lawsuit No punishment

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Presentation on theme: "Civil Vs. Criminal People vs People Tort/lawsuit No punishment"— Presentation transcript:

1 Civil Vs. Criminal People vs People Tort/lawsuit No punishment
Restitution vs retribution Settle disputes State or federal vs person Criminal Case Retribution instead of restitution To deter society from doing illegal things

2 Civil vs Criminal Steps before a trial
Complaint and set court date Disclosure Trial Arrest Booking Arraignment Guilty Not Guilty No Lo Contendere Preliminary Trials 1Grand Jury 2 Bail Hearing 3 Evidence Hearing 4 Venue Hearing

3 Civil vs Criminal Ending the case Before decision
Settlement at any time A settlement is a compromise between the plaintiff and the defendant. The plaintiff will pay some amount. These settlements are usually private and no one knows the details Plea Bargain A plea Bargain is when a defendant agrees to say he is guilty for a lesser sentence or a reduced charge. Why does the prosecution agree? Less sentences reduce our over crowded prisons.

4 Pre-Trial: The Jury Jury Selection- Seating the jury
Each lawyer gets to examine each juror to find out if the juror would be good for the case. Removal for cause- The juror can not be impartial in the case Peremptory Challenges- The lawyer excludes this person form the case.

5 Civil vs. Criminal Trial
Plaintiff Opening Defense Opening Plaintiff Witnesses Defense Witnesses Plaintiff Closing Defense Closing Prosecution Opening Defense Opening Prosecution Witnesses Defense Witnesses Prosecution Closing Defense Closing

6 Civil vs. Criminal End of Trial: Decisions
Burden of proof= Preponderance of Evidence- Jury must weigh the evidence and decide which side won. Defense must also prove innocence For the plaintiff Against the plaintiff Burden of proof= Beyond a reasonable doubt- They must be 100% sure the defendant did it to find a guilty verdict. Burden is on Prosecution because one is innocent until proven guilty Acquitted Guilty Mistrial Hung Jury

7 Murder Intent- A person must intentionally do the crime when the action takes place Malice- Anger (motive can replace malice) Deliberation- A person must weigh between the action and the consequences Premeditation- Planning

8 Murder 1st degree Murder: premeditation, deliberation, intent and malice 2nd degree murder: deliberation, intent and malice voluntary manslaughter: intent and malice *In NC, the punishment for someone convicted of 1st degree murder is always: 1. Life in prison or 2. Death penalty


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