No, once the charges have been filed the case is in the hands of the prosecution and the involved parties have no say in the adjudication process.
A direct victim is the actual victim of a situation. If a man is beating his wife, she is the direct victim.
A victim of torture.
She was the victim of the Reign of Terror.
Scapegoat This person is like a victim of the issue.These people probably don't know anything about the situation or they are blamed for another person's incident!
A victim of war is someone directly impacted by the war. This includes soldiers who are injured or kills or citizens who are put into danger.
Artificial respirationAnother answer:I'd go with the Heimlich maneuver.
state can pick up the charge if they want.
An assault case in the UK is The State vs The Accused, and while charges can be dropped at the request of the victim, it's not automatic. Depending on the circumstances (if the attacker was armed, whether the attack was premeditated) the state might ignore the wishes of the victim.
CPR has been performed and emergency medical help has arrived on the scene, oxygen is administered to the victim. If the victim's breathing has stopped or is otherwise impaired, a tube is inserted into the windpipe
CPR has been performed and emergency medical help has arrived on the scene, oxygen is administered to the victim. If the victim's breathing has stopped or is otherwise impaired, a tube is inserted into the windpipe
The cast of Walking Dead - 2008 includes: Jared Barron as Accident Victim Carolina Monnerat as Accident Victim
i was wondering that in this type of a charge agg aslt victim bound/ restr . what do they have to exactly prove for someone to be guilty? can it be lowered to something else.?
Assuming that you mean the charges were originally taken by the victim and dropped by or at the request of the victim, Then if the state (in GA at least) motions to prosecute (typically domestics) on behalf of the state, then the charges stand and the victim takes on the role of victim/witness in stead of victim/complainant. The state can continue to pursue domestic violence charges and prosecution in domestic situations now due to laws adopted after years of battered spouses dropping charges against their abusers because of fear and misguided loyalty.
The statement is false. CPR should only begin if the patient has stopped breathing or if their heart has stopped beating. While it is likely that a choking victim has ceased breathing if they have lost consciousness, it is not an absolute indicator.
Your question is an attempt at changing the time-line of events, and re-stating them out of the sequence in which they actually occurred. (1) You committed the offense (2) The victim reported it (3) You were arrested (4) At sometime after your arrest you apparently brought pressure to bear on the victim to withdraw their complaint against you. It is at this point that you apparently committed the act that 'dissuaded' the victim (Intimidation of a State's Witness) from going forward with their testimony . FACT: simply because the victim expresses the desire withdraw their complaint does NOT automatically "drop" the charges and make them 'go away.' In reality they weren't dropped, and the charge still exist because it is the STATE that is prosecuting you for the offense, and NOT the individual victim personally.
About 90%. No victim no crime
Depends on the type of case. In some cases the defense can argue that as the victim doesn't wish to turn up they are therefore forfeting the case. In other cases the police may choose to take the case to court even without the victim if there is sufficent evidence to do so.