Want this question answered?
protons - positive charge electrons - negative charge neutrons - no charge
Electrons are negatively charged, protons are positively charge and neutrons have no charge.
Electrons are negatively charged.
A positive charge will attract a nearby negatively charged particle.Oppositely charged particles attract each other while ones with the same charge repel each other.
The cathode is negatively charged. A good way to remember this is thinking of what it's doing. A cathode attracts cations which are positively charged. In order to attract a positive charge, the charge on the electrode must be oppositely charged. So it has to carry a negative charge. The opposite is true for the anode. Since it attracts anions which are negatively charged, the electrode must carry a positive charge.
Depending on the prosecuting authorities, that person can be charged with robbery, assault, attempted murder and murder (if someone dies during the robbery).
A 'formal' charge. You can be indicted for armed robbery or you can be charged with armed robbery.
Yes, even the Attempt to commit a strong arm robbery is an offense - just the same as you would be charged if you attempted the robbery with a gun but got nothing. It is the felonious assault to commit the robbery which is the offense, not whether it was successful or not.
Real identity: LaVerne Moore, he was charged with but found not guilty of armed robbery and assault.
There is no such charge. So-called "accessories" are charged as "principles," the same as the person who actually commted the robbery.
When a person is charged with assault, an employer can do a background check to look at a persons criminal past. The only way to get the charge off of your record, is to return to court and ask the judge if it can be expunged.
If you plotted or assisted in a robbery you COULD be charged as a principal in the offense, just as much as if you were there and did it.
There are numerous criminal charges one could be charged with. One could be charged with battery, manslaughter, assault, DWI, DUI, fraud and armed robbery.
No, burglary is the crime of "Trespassing with the intent of committing a felony". Trespassing is not a violent act, and the intent to commit a felony is not a violent act. If someone were to be harmed during a break-in, the offender would be charged with other violent crimes, which may include, but are not limited to; battery, assault, and robbery (robbery would replace burglary as a charge).
it will show up as charged but not committed
yeh :/
Assault and violent robbery