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Civil laws ,
Criminal activities can be committed by individuals against a business as well as by businesses through the actions of their employees against consumers, the general public, and/or stockholders.
The agency that investigated the report will probably always maintain a copy on file but since you say it was non-criminal, it will not show up on any criminal history check.
No, but criminal records are not available to the general public, only to legitimate organizations or individuals such as law enforcement agencies, private investigators and background-checking providers.
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The criminal justice system (in the United States) endeavors to maintain public safety and personal freedoms by dealing with criminal activity. There are 3 main agencies: the police, the courts, and the correctional agencies. The police identify and investigate activity that violates criminal law. The courts take criminal activity and hold a fair trial, ultimately determining if somebody has violated criminal law and what consequences they will face. Then the correctional agencies will carry out the consequences, while upholding the criminal's personal rights.
No. Only law enforcement agencies can receive and act on criminal complaints.
Neither individuals nor businesses can "file charges." Only the prosecutor's office can 'file' criminal charges. Anyone else can only file a criminal complaint or report a crime to law enforcement. An investigation is conducted and if probable cause is found an arrest is made or a warrant is applied for. A business can file a criminal complaint against someone.
All the way. State agencies review your whole adult criminal history back to the age of 18. Juvenile records are sealed. And, FYI - most state agencies do fingerprinting, so its not a good idea to lie about it.
Criminal justice classes study the systems and processes of criminal justice in their own nation. In the United States this means learning about the police, the courts, and the correctional agencies, and then learning how a criminal case would move through these agencies. Further classes may learn more about the specifics of criminal law, or the moral implications of different systems.
Criminal Justice agencies can only provide the services that taxpayers are willing to pay for. Any public agency is happy to be allocated more money for their work.