You answer truthfully. If you lie and get the job you will be fired when they find out. Many jobs also do background checks and it will come out anyway, so tell the truth.
No, you do not have to share your plagiarism as a crime, especially if you haven't been convicted. Job applications are looking for theft and other crimes.
Yes depending on the crime committed.
You can ALWAYS be charged and convicted of a crime that you just committed. However, it cannot be made a part of the same case you were going to court for.
a) He has not committed a crime b) He has not been convicted of committing a crime... c) ...yet.
Because you have been convicted of committing a crime or are suspected of having committed a crime and are awaiting trial
If they are asking if you have been convicted of a crime, yes you need to disclose.
No. Whether or not they remember the crime does not change the fact that they committed the crime.
a misdemenor ISNT considered a crime The correct answer is YES. If the question is have you been convicted of a crime. If the question is have you been convicted of a felony then your answer should be no.
the three elements of a crime should be present ( motive, knowledge, and opportunity ) for the conviction of a person committed a crime.
On applications, when they ask "have you been convicted of a crime?" look at the statements written below. They describe the situations that will fall into the catagorie of being "convicted." Recieving an MIC ticket is not a convicted crome. The ones that are, arr mainly felonies. I have two misdemeanors, and never have I had to answer yes to that question...I even went as far as to ask the policeman who gave me them if I had to answer yes, and he told me no. Good luck.
No. If you committed that crime in one county and were arrested, tried, and convicted of THAT crime - it does NOT protect you from being charged and tried for an identical, but seperate, crime you committed in another location. If you committed TWO identical offenses, the fact that you were convicted of one in one county, does not protect you from the consequences of the crime you committed in another county.
The burden of proof is BELIEF, BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT, that the accused committed the crime.