Nixon was never convicted of any crimes. He was pardoned by President Gerald Ford a month after he resigned "for any crimes he committed or may have committed between January 20, 1969 and August 9, 1974".
this is a stupid answer but here he was doing things that a president was not aloud to do like making laws with out the governments consent.
The preposition for guilty is "of." For example, "He was guilty of the crime."
The preposition "of" typically goes with "guilty," as in "guilty of a crime."
A culprit is someone who is guilty of a crime, or other misdeed.
Aquitted is a pronouncement of "not guilty." Not guilty is not innocent.
To relieve from a charge of fault or crime; declare not guilty: They acquitted him of the crime. The jury acquitted her, but I still think she's guilty.
In the US, the only time you can say a person is guilty of a crime is after they have been convicted of the crime. Until a person is convicted or admits guilt in a court of law, they are charged with the crime or suspected of the crime.
Guilty means that a person admits to committing the crime they were accused of. Not guilty means that a person denies committing the crime and the prosecution must prove their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt in court.
The key word is GUILTY. There is no such thing as the "Fourth Degree of Guilty." Whatever crime/offense was charged (in the fourth degree) means that the legislature (when they passed the law) determined that there were several degrees of seriousness to that particular crime.
Not in Texas, but most other states, yes.
To accuse a judge of a crime is called impeachment. If an official is found guilty of a crime they can be impeached and removed from their appointment.
The Watergate Scandal
Innocent means you are innocent of a crime.. That is you did not commit it. A court (jury/judge) will not find someone "innocent". They can't say that you did not commit a crime, they can only decide for "not guilty" if the evidence presented is enough that you are believed to have committed a crime (guilty) or not (not guilty).