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Accumulative Sentence

 
Law Encyclopedia: Accumulative Sentence
This entry contains information applicable to United States law only.

A sentence — a court's formal pronouncement of the legal consequences of a person's conviction of a crime — additional to others, imposed on a defendant who has been convicted upon an indictment containing several counts, each charging a distinct offense, or who is under conviction at the same time for several distinct offenses; each sentence is to run consecutively, beginning at the expiration of the previous sentence.

A person must finish one sentence before being allowed to start the next one. Another name for accumulative sentence is cumulative or consecutive sentence.

The opposite of an accumulative sentence is a concurrent sentence — two or more prison sentences that are to be served simultaneously, so that the prisoner is entitled to be released at the end of the longest sentence.

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Law Encyclopedia. West's Encyclopedia of American Law. Copyright © 1998 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more