The armed suspect. Hopefully you had a chance before confronting the suspect to call for assistance.
Another View: At the scene of an offense; if an armed injured perpetrator is still on the scene, along with an injured citizen or victim, an officers first priority is to neutralize the threat from the perpetrator - disarming him by whatever means necessary - then restaining him in cuffs or ties. Once the threat is neutralized, ideally, a triage of all the injured parties should be conducted to determine who it is that needs aid the most. However, in actual practice the natural tendency is to evaluate and/or tend to the injuries of the innocent parties first before turning attention to the perpetrator. Hopefully by that time (as stated above) assistance will have arrived on the scene.
The perpetrator of a crime is the person who actually committed the crime. A suspect may or may not have committed the crime. A suspect has not been confirmed as being the perpetrator.
The suspect was arrested for committing armed robbery.
Suspect.
The noun suspect is a person considered guilty of a crime, or a cause of other types of situations. Examples: The police have identified a suspect in the crime. A faulty joint is the main suspect for this leak.
It depends on whether they think the person is part of the crime as well. If they do, then the person is called an accomplice... someone who helped the suspect commit the crime. If not, then the person is just an associate... someone who knows the suspect and might be able to identify where he or she is.
Criminal, perpetrator, suspect, person of interest.
Suspect and culprit are not synonymous. "Suspect" refers to someone who is thought to be involved in a crime but has not been proven guilty, while "culprit" specifically denotes the person who is responsible for committing a crime.
depends on the state.
Crime needs to be addresed because if someone gets injured in that crime than that person needs to be stoped by someone. That is all.
The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.The police had linked the crime to the suspect with the new evidence they had found.
The noun form of "suspect" is "suspect." It can be used to describe a person or thing believed to be involved in a crime, event, or situation under investigation. For example, "The suspect was taken into custody by the police."
The term "suspect" is still used when there is some evidence the person was involved. The term "person of interest" is used when authorities want to interview someone that could be a potential suspect, a witness, or who may have some information pertaining to the crime.