the complainant
The word self in self-incrimination refers to the person who is suspected of a crime and makes a statement about it. If he claims to know more than he should or he confesses, he has incriminated himself. If somebody else witnesses him at the scene, they are incriminating him but it is not self-incrimination.
An accomplice is somebody who joins in with an activity of another person. Usually an accomplice is somebody that has helped a person commit a crime.
When accusing the president of a crime the term impeachment is typically used. This term refers to the actual proceedings against the president.
1. To legally charge (someone) with an offense or crime. 2. To claim that (someone) has done something wrong.
impeachment
a criminal is a person who does crime, crime= something illegal.
If it is on purpose, yes, or if the person who accused the other person did not know what was going on and thought something bad was happening, then no. But if a policeman had proof that someone was a criminal, and the "criminal" explained how he wasn't one and it was a misunderstanding, then that false accusation is okay. But if a paronoid adult was accusing someone across the street for killing his dog with no proof, then it's a crime.
A crime is something bad and illegal that a person does intentionally ( or unintentionally). Stealing someone's property is a crime, for example.A criminal (a person who commits a crime) is to be punished for it by law.A Crime scene is the place where a crime was committed.
Is it illegal to open somebody's mail?
1. To charge a serving government official with serious misconduct while in office. 2. cast somebody oout of public office. 3. to charge somebody with a crime or misdemeanor 4. Disparage somebody: question a person's good character.
catnip
A victim is the person that the crime is committed to and the defendant is a person that is being sued or accused of something