Tort of battery is intentionally and voluntarily bringing about an unconsented harmful or offensive contact with a person ot to something closely associated to them. Battery is a criminal offense involving unlawful physical contact, distinct from assault in that the contact is not necessarily violent.
There is no difference. A felony IS criminal offense.
A "tort" is a civil offense whereas 'assault" is a criminal offense, the two are not compatible.
Legally, no, there is no difference. A felony offense is a felony offense in the eyes of the law. As a practical matter however, in todays society there is less stigma attached to the vehicle offense than to the criminal offense. HOWEVER - as far ast the possession of firearms is concerned - USE CAUTION -you would need to apply for expungement and/or to get your firearms rights returned, or you could be in BIG trouble.
Blackmail is a criminal offense.
It is a criminal offense.
An arrest warrant can be issued for something such as an FTA (failure to appear in court), a criminal arrest warrant is issued for an individual who has been charged with a criminal offense, even so they are both basically the same.
Yes, it is a criminal offense, and is a permanent record unless you qualify to petition to have it concealed from the public.
It cannot.
Under the ex post facto rule, you cannot be charged with a criminal offense if it was not a criminal offense at the time you committed it. By the same token, if you committed a criminal offense that has since been repealed (meaning this is no longer a criminal offense) you still are considered having a criminal record for that offense.
Its not a criminal offense but you can still go to jail for it.
Yes, DUI is a criminal offense in the Commonwealth of VA.
A flex offense is being more flexible.A motion offense is doing whatever the heck you can.