It isn't in particular. ANY crime involving a deadly weapon is important.
In most states it's not a crime to have a knife in your car, so obviously registration fraud is much worse.
maybe its because of the locally thing about the nationally thing even though it was the locally thing but i swear to your foot it was the nationally thing so yeah that is preettyy much it so have fun yeah kooll was it going on and who is writing this brillanitine answer nice on!
No. The band are against drugs, knife and gun crime.
It refers to crime where the weapon involved happens to be a knife. This includes robbery, aggravated assault (or assault with a deadly weapon), malicious wounding, rape (if used to menace) and of course murder. The term is more or less a parallel of "gun crime." While gun crime has a greater focus in places such as the USA, knife crime is of greater focus in places like the UK due to the nation's heavy restrictions guns in general. Knife crime simply swells to fill the space left by guns, so to speak.
My So Called Knife was created in 2002-05.
no people need the right to defend themselves with something besides a pocket knife or a pot and pan. this is why crime is so high in england
So you don't injure your self and others around you, and to not spoil the food, and to cut it all the same shape and size.
yes yes it is because the queen is so important to the people
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I assume that you are referring to instances where possession of the knife in question would in itself not be illegal, which will depend on the type of knife and the jurisdiction. Possessing one for illegal purposes would seem to suggest that there is a purpose behind carrying it which would be to carry out a crime. The crime itself wouldn't be the issue then, for instance if you stabbed someone with it then it would be the stabbing you'd be charged with and not the knife possession. So what we end up with is that carrying the knife would either be legal or illegal, and if it's illegal than that in itself would be criminal. Otherwise, it would be the intent or act that would be breaking the law. This would be similar to carrying around a baseball bat, where there are legitimate purposes for this, playing baseball for instance, and there are purposes where it's being used as a weapon. So if you threaten someone with one, you have committed the crime of assault, and you wouldn't normally be charged with the additional offense of carrying the bat, in the same way you could be charged with illegal possession of a gun in addition if that were your weapon of choice. So it's only when the item itself is illegal that this matters, although in the end its the specific use of the item that will be related to the crime, so if it's for unlawful purposes, everything unlawful about the event will be applicable.
Do you possibly mean a knife that is attached to the front of a rifle? If so, that is a bayonet.
in my idea detective or police officer are responsible in crime i mean the role of a detective is so important, he goes to the crime scene,searches foe the clues and evidences,talks to the witnesses and finally he can say who ia guilty?