YES you can ! You are 'aiding and abetting' a KNOWN criminal. You would be treated as if you had also committed the crime.
Certainly. Especially, if the Attempted Murder case is part and parcel of the murder charge that they are facing.
If you believe in The Bible, only one person is ever known to have been resurrected. No matter by WHAT means the victim survives the murder attempt, if there is no deceased there can be no charge of murder. Therefore, it would be attempted murder.
Yes, only if person dies from injuries sustained from the attempted murder of that person.
life in prisonAnother View: The penalty can be the same as the sentence for the person who actually committed the offense.
Attempted murder is a criminal charge and can only be brought by the state or, in some specific cases, federal authority. A person can, however sew for damages and make a case for punitive damages to be assessed.
no
Attempted murder is a serious criminal offense and can result in life in prison. If convicted of attempted murder in California, a person can be fined up to $10,000 and receive a life in prison sentence.
If that person dies due to the injuries cause from the attempted murder then you can be charged with murder. But if you are convicted of attempted murder prior to that, double jeopardy would prevent you from being convicted of murder
Yes, it is. It's also attempted murder to kick a person in the head with a shooed foot, esp one who is on the ground. e.g. Acting deliberately or recklessly with extreme disregard for life is attempted murder.
Murder is the unlawful killing of another person with intent, while attempted murder is the unsuccessful attempt to unlawfully kill another person with intent. The key difference is that murder involves the completion of the act, resulting in the death of the victim, while attempted murder involves the intent and effort to kill, but the act is not completed.
It depends on the details of the offence. Was the person raped during the course of the attempted murder? - if so, no limitation date applies. Also, when the person eventually dies, if the autopsy shows that the death was in anyway causally related to an old injury (caused by the attempted murder), which could be a simple infection, then the death will be found attributable to the attempted murder and changed to a murder charge and thus no limitation applies. Hope this helps.
If it was done with malice, You can have a felony charge on your belt. Attempted Murder. You can go to jail for 1yr 1 day or more.