Illness
A mitigating circumstance.
A combination of aggravating and mitigating circumstances. Aggravating circumstances may be the seriousness of the crime, your risk of flight for prosecution, your past criminal history. Mitigating circumstances may be your good reputation.
The phrase "mitigating circumstances" refers to the reasons an event occurred. It is most often used in reference to a law being broken, and the mitigating circumstances being the reasons the law was broken. It is usually used to win lenience in court.
Mitigating factors are to do with law, they apply both in criminal and civl. It where certain factors/circumstances allow the court to give a lighter sentance than what would normally be given. It is the opposite of Aggravating factors.
Increasing negative = Aggravating. Reducing negative= mitigating. Aggravating circumstance is a circumstance that does not exonerate a person but which reduces the penalty associated with the offense.
Synonyms for vindicate:AbsolveAcquitAdvocateApproveAssertClearConfuteContendCorroborateDefendDisculpateDisproveExculpateExcuseExonerateExtenuateFreeJustifyLegitimizeMaintainPardonProveRebutRefuteSubstantiateSupportUphold
Yes, but you may have mitigating circumstances.
Aggravating circumstances are factors that make a crime more serious or deserving of a harsher punishment, such as the presence of violence or a previous criminal record. Mitigating circumstances, on the other hand, are factors that may make a crime less serious or deserving of a lesser punishment, such as the defendant's age or mental state.
The officer can ticket you for the traffic violation, he or she can arrest you if there are mitigating circumstances.
Resubmit it to court file continuous.
No, according to Catholic doctrine, a person can only be baptized once. The sacrament of baptism is considered a one-time event that cleanses the soul of original sin and initiates the individual into the Catholic faith. If there is doubt about the validity of a previous baptism, a conditional baptism may be performed, but this is rare and requires specific circumstances.
There are no set penalties for criminal offenses. After conviction, the court must consider the facts and circumstances of the crime, the defendant's prior history, and a number of other mitigating and aggravating circumstances.