Means: Not Guilty
Lady Macbeth's death can be said to be the result of guilt, although the play is not explicit about how she died. She may have committed suicide, finding her life to be miserable and empty. She may have wandered off a parapet in one of her guilt-ridden sleepwalking sessions.
Civil Conviction - a finding of guilt to a violation of a rule, regulation or law outside a criminal court
A deferred adjudicated felony is where the court "puts off" a finding of guilt. Most often during a deferred adjudication, the person is put on community supervision. If the term is completed without revocation of probation it will remain a deferred adjudicated and not a conviction. It is important to realize that deferred is not a conviction. There was never a finding of guilt by the court.
An arrest if no charges are filed may not prevent you from buying a firearm. You cannot buy a gun after a plea of guilt or finding of guilt for a domestic violence related offense even if just a misdemeanor.
You can be factually guilty without being legally guilty. You may have actually committed the crime, but if it can't be proven in a court of law you aren't legally guilty.
It means that a judge has formally found, or declared, a juvenile to be legally a "delinquent."
He was acquitted so he could leave prison and go home.
Jurors do not sentence. The jurors give their finding of guilt or innocence. Then, court usually adjourns and weeks or months later, the Judge issues a sentence.
I believe that you have your terms confused. It is a PLEAof Guilt - not a motion of guilt.
The homophone for guilt is gilt.
Xavier's greatest weakness is guilt. Guilt for the death of his students, guilt for not raising his son David (Legion), guilt for creating Onlsaught, guilt for manipulating Amelia Vaught's affections, and guilt for enslaving Danger. Stairs are also a major weakness.
A dismissal indicates that the prosecutor has decided not to pursue the charge OR that a judge has decided there is not enough evidence to pursue the charge. It is not a finding of guilt of any kind. It may not be a finding of innocence, either; just an acknowledgement that the charges cannot be proved adequately with the evidence available.