Click link below! That site may give you a clue.
Yes, the correct spelling is "accused" (alleged to be guilty).
Alleged threatening and violent behavior is a term used to describe someone who is being accused of threatening behavior. This essentially means they are not guilty yet.
One of the most important ones that we use today: No man (and Woman and child) can be punished until proven guilty. STATED: The alleged is innocent, until proven guilty
"Alleged" doesn't mean 'guilty' or 'responsible'. Demanding a security deposit at this stage in the process doesn't really fit, unless the governing documents and their process provide otherwise.
Clay Shaw was arrested for attempting to assassinate President Kennedy. He was alleged to be helped by Lee Harvey Oswald and others. He was found not guilty.
Prove you were not the person in possession or that you didn't know it was drugs, or that it wasn't actually drugs, or that there is no evidence to show that you were the person in possession of the alleged drugs. Simple.
In a criminal case, a charge is the specific criminal act that the accused is alleged to have committed. For example, a person could be charged with murder or possession of a controlled substance. A plea is the defendant's formal response. Typically, the defendant can plead guilty or not guilty, and sometimes nolo contendre.
Lee Harvey Oswald, an employee at the warehouse where the shots were fired from. Oswald was arrested later that day for murdering a police officer, before he was suspected for murdering the President.
The term is called 'mens rea' In order to be convicted of any crime, every 'element' of the crime must be proven by the government beyond a reasonable doubt. So, it depends on what the crime is, and what are the particular elements of the crime alleged. If the alleged crime includes a particular 'state of mind' or 'mens rea', the government would have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant possessed the mens rea to commit the alleged offense. An example would be a defendant not being guilty by reason of a mental defect, sometimes called not guilty by reason of insanity. This explains why some defendants are not found guilty or not charged with some crime, and are instead committed to a government mental institution.
The two alleged killers of Emmett Till, Roy Bryant and J.W. Milam, were acquitted of Till's kidnapping and murder, but later admitted to killing him in a magazine interview. They each lived into their sixties, both dying of cancer, and neither publicly expressed remorse for the crime.
As a result of a plea agreement with the prosecution, you plead guilty to one or more charges. You are placed on probation prior to sentencing and prior to any entry of conviction. If you successfully complete your probationary period your guilty plea is withdrawn and the case against you dismissed... The record shows that the charges against you were dismissed so your record remains clean. If you are alleged to violate the terms of the deferred judgment, a hearing will be held. As a result of a plea agreement with the prosecution, you plead guilty to one or more charges. You are placed on probation prior to sentencing and prior to any entry of conviction. If you successfully complete your probationary period your guilty plea is withdrawn and the case against you dismissed... The record shows that the charges against you were dismissed so your record remains clean. If you are alleged to violate the terms of the deferred judgment, a hearing will be held.
Betty Smith was a school girl in a village about 35 miles north of Van Rhynsdorp. It was alleged that she had received a parcel of rough diamonds from Alexander Bay. Three men were alleged to have lured her from a school dance and murdered her. Her body was found in a ditch. A trial took place in Cape Town in 1953 but all the accused were found not guilty.