Most crimes could be considered a grave offense as that is one of the definitions for the word crime. However, crimes that are typically considered grave offenses have to do with mortality.
A grave offense is another term for a serious offense. The legal system separates crimes into felonies and misdemeanors. Felonies are considered more serious, or grave, offenses to society.
One of the meanings of "grave" is "serious."From Dictionary.com:1. serious or solemn; sober: a grave person; grave thoughts.2. weighty, momentous, or important: grave responsibilities.3. threatening a seriously bad outcome or involving serious issues; critical: a grave situation; a grave illness.A grave offense is a serious offense.
A person under an indictment or on trial for a criminal offense cannot apply for a passport in the United States.
Yes. If you have confessed to the police or the authorities, or confessed to someone who reports that confession to the authorities and they can then prove you committed the offense. The only thing that might save you is if the offense is under a statute of limitation. Which means that after a number of years, there is no punishment for the offense. But only lesser crimes have a statute of imitations. Never homicide or other such violent crimes.
Revised answer: If this offense is classified as a family/domestic violence offense under the Georgia criminal code - such crimes are ineligible for expungement in every state that I am aware of.
A prior offense record is an official listing of all the crimes a person has committed. After a certain number of years, some lesser crimes can be removed from a person's record.
An author would think plagiarism is a grave offense because that is who they are. They write, they are known for that, the things they write make them who they are. If you take the work they produce as your own, it makes them incomplete.
property crime
ANY federal offense.
Grave offenses would be committing murder, grand theft, etc. Less grave offenses would be things such as J-walking, speeding, and petty theft.
offense-specific
It often depends on the specific offense. Serious crimes often do not have a limitation. You will have to consult the specific laws for your jurisdiction.