Information is given here about the crimes the inmate was convicted of that resulted in his or her commitment to state prison. The typical inmate is committed to state prison for one or a few crimes. However, there are a significant number of inmates with a rather lengthy list of crimes. For simplicity, the information here is limited to a maximum of four crimes. The four shown are selected based on length of sentence; i.e., those with the longest sentences. If less than 4 crimes are shown for an inmate, there are no others. Conversely, if there are four crimes are shown, there is the possibility that there are more. If there are more, the sentences for them are no longer than for the four shown and are possibly shorter. In all cases, the aggregate sentence information reflects the time owed on all crimes whether listed on this page of information or not.
The letters ATT at the beginning of a crime description indicate that the inmate as convicted of an attempt of that crime.
The phrase (HATE CRIME) at the end of a crime description indicates that the inmate was convicted of a crime that also involved bias or prejudice against a particular group and therefore, was deemed to be a hate crime. Hate crimes have longer sentences and higher crime classifications than comparable non-hate crimes.
The crime class is a set of codes including A1, A2, A3, B, C, D, and E with A1 felonies being the most serious and E felonies the least serious. All crimes listed are classified as felonies.
Yes
criminal possession of forged instrument in the 2nd
Yes you have to pay property taxes (CRIM), city and county taxes. These are usually part of your escrow if the house has a mortgage on it.
166 2nd class passengers died on Titanic. (58%)
118 people survived in 2nd class on Titanic (42%).
166 2nd class passengers died on Titanic (58%).
1st class,2nd class and 3rd class
118 people survived in 2nd class on Titanic (42%).
118 people survived in 2nd class on Titanic (42%).
No, it's a 2nd class.
no, it is a first class lever
2nd class lever