It is committed.
The past perfect tense of "commit" in the sentence would be "had committed" – the detectives believed that the maid had committed the theft.
Detectives had believed that the maid had committed the theft.
Had committed
past tense
Yes, that sentence uses "suspect" correctly. It suggests that men are believed to be more likely to commit crimes than women, but it does not make a definitive statement about their guilt. It implies a suspicion or belief rather than a proven fact.
Offenders who commit serious crimes often face legal consequences.
Detectives had believed that the maid had committed the theft.
Had committed
past tense
He would have believed that.
He was not deterred from continuing to commit crimes.
yes of course specially on live interviews or press conferences. nobody's perfect. even presidents commit errors.
I am going to commit to this program so the know that i would come everyday they call me in i promise.
It means it didn't commit a fallacy.
Completion of your sentence.
No necessity can grab the intent to commit a crime.
You will need a lawyer if you commit a crime.
If you commit a crime when you are young it is considered a misdemeanor.