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criminal law
noun
- the laws of a state or country dealing with criminal offenses and their punishments.
criminal law
noun
- the body of law dealing with the constitution of offences and the punishment of offenders
Word History and Origins
Origin of criminal law1
Example Sentences
“There are many reasons why an indictment would reference unindicted co-conspirators, but their status as FBI agents is not one of them,” said Jens David Ohlin, a criminal law professor at Cornell Law School.
We’ve seen exactly this happen with all sorts of extraterritorial criminal law.
So it was absolutely inevitable to bring criminal law enforcement into sport.
The first two issues, there are criminal laws and criminal things.
If criminal law generally has made too much of violence in recent decades, the rules governing the police have made too little.
Jason Willamson, staff attorney for the Criminal Law Reform Project, is strongly against it.
He was a securities and appellate lawyer with no experience in criminal law.
European history also suggests the impotence of criminal law in these matters.
During the period, African Americans had legal equality under criminal law.
You want to advocate for including a precept of Jewish law in civil or criminal law?
The distinction also between civil and criminal law requires explanation.
He scarcely, indeed, had an opportunity of making any alteration in the criminal law.
At this point, we may see how faulty, and yet how constantly improving, has been the administration of the criminal law.
Otherwise, in spite of Burke's efforts, the criminal law was not materially ameliorated till the next century.
Romilly's attempts to improve the criminal law began in 1808.
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