Depending if you stab, murder, gas, kick or punch. If you murder, you will suffer for the REST OF YOUR LIFE in PRISON. Other things are negotiable, depending on location/nationality/strictness of police force/previous convictions.
You will serve anywhere from 3 months to 2 years depending upon the methods used, intent, and of course how strongly the judge feels, but whatever the sentence it is mandatory that you will have to get a at lease 92 cock-meat Sandwiches.
Depends on the state, but a mandatory minium of five years is about the norm.
The maximum penalty for common assault is 5 years. For assault causing bodily harm, the maximum penalty is 10 years. And for aggravated assault, the maximum penalty is 14 years.
Assault with intent to do great bodily harm is a felony. It can cause a person to get quite a bit of jail time and also pay a fine.
No. Stabbing someone is "Assault With Iintent to Kill," or "Assault With Intent to Do Great Bodily Harm." Both felony offenses.
Yes, because the "intent" to do bodily harm existed and you "attempted" to carry it out.
Yes. Both crimes are felonies. The term "aggravated" added to an assault charge in most jurisdictions strictly implies that the assault was with the intent to cause serious bodily harm. This is to distinguish it from simply "assault", as individuals charged with assault did not intend serious harm. Because the intent to cause serious bodily harm is specifically stated in the statute, it is considered a violent crime.Added: These are examples of types of crime that are considered to be "Crimes Of Moral Turpitude."
It means that someone assaulted someone else with the intent of doing them GREAT bodily harm, over and above a mere hand-to-hand fist-fight. In some jurisdictions this offense could amount to a charge of 'Assault With Intent to Maim.'
a lot. 100 grams is enough to charge you with the intent to sell.
What kind of assault -assault with intent to commit murder, assualt with intent to do great bodily harm less than murder? Also if one has prior felony conviction - felon in possession of firearm as added charge or habitual criminal (life-no parole!) At worst case on assault -10-20yrs - or2-10 on lesser assault. These are just generalizations - each jurisdiction has different standards
Assault is to physically attack someone with intent to harm.
"Deadly assault" or "assault with intent to kill".
Actus reus is a Latin term meaning the guilty act. The 'actus reus' of an assault is the actual physical act of the assault itself. When the actus reus, as well as the proof of the existence of criminal intent, is proved, a person may be convicted of a crime.
No. It is implicit in the means and method used to carry out the offense that great bodily harm was intended.
It depends on the circumstances, did you start the fight, or were you the victim, what injuries were sustained, were weapons used? In the UK the possible charges would be affray, common assault, aggravated assault, assault occasioning actual bodily harm, grievous bodily harm, grievous bodily harm with intent. The maximum sentence would be five years for an assault-related conviction