For those convicted of misdemeanors - jail. For those convicted of felonies - prison.
penal establishments
yes
Many people convicted of crimes are sent to prison. These days our prisons are over crowded.
No. THe penalty is prison or death, but most people convicted are sent to prison.
Nothing during, but after they held the famous Nuremberg Trials, where many Nazi leaders and scientist were convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity. They were then sentenced to death, or sent to Area 51 to work for the US, no joke.
After the American colonies were no longer viable as venues for convicts following the American War of Independence, the convicts who were sent to Australia were from Great Britain. They included anyone from England, Scotland, Ireland or Wales who was convicted of crimes such as burglary, fraud or petty theft, but not violent crimes such as manslaughter or murder.
He was convicted of fraud.
Dolores Umbridge did not die in the Harry Potter series. After Voldemort fell to Harry Potter, and the de-corruption of the Ministry of Magic began under the control of Minister of Magic, Kingsley Shacklebolt, Umbridge was arrested and interrogated, put on trial for crimes against Muggle-borns and was sent to the prison fortress Azkaban.
If your IP address was sent to the cyber crimes unit, you may have committed a crime over the Internet that will now be investigated by the authorities. Sharing illegal materials or scamming people is one way to get your IP address reported.
hes being sent there because he commented some crimes
The people on the First Fleet had in common the fact that they were leaving England to settle in an "uncivilised" land for an undetermined number of years.The convicts who made up most of the First Fleet were all convicted of a variety of crimes, mostly petty theft, and were sent away from their home country of England to a land far away, of which most of them had never even heard.
tax evasion
Crimes such as murder, armed robbery, sexual assault, drug trafficking, fraud, and certain white-collar crimes can result in a prison sentence, depending on the severity and the laws of the country or state where the crime occurred.