In the United States, the number of jurors required to impose a death sentence for a first-degree murder conviction varies by state. However, most states require a unanimous jury decision to impose the death penalty. Some states may allow non-unanimous verdicts in certain circumstances, but a unanimous decision is typically seen as a standard requirement for capital cases.
This depends on the degree of murder: 5 years to life, or death.
it depends on which country you are in. In the US, it is probably a death sentence or a life sentence
Most states' statutes provide the death penalty or life imprisonment for capital murder.
Death sentence. By electric chair or a hanging.
The offenses that can apply to a capital murder conviction (a death sentence) vary from state to state; there are various designated elements to a murder that elevates the crime to qualify for the death penalty. Some of these might be torture with murder, murder of a law enforcement officer, multiple murders, etc.
There are many crimes that have punishments such as murder. Some states in the United States will sentence someone to death for a murder.
Carl Dean Rails was not sentenced to death for the murder of Claire Monti. In 2016, he was found guilty of her murder but received a life sentence instead. The case received attention due to the circumstances surrounding Monti's death and Rails' conviction.
robbery, theft, murder, speeding and DUI
The sentence for malice murder typically involves a life sentence without the possibility of parole or the death penalty, depending on jurisdiction and specific circumstances. Felony murder also generally carries a sentence of life imprisonment, as it involves a death occurring during the commission of a dangerous felony. If convicted of both charges, the sentences may run consecutively or concurrently, depending on the court's decision. Ultimately, the exact sentence will vary based on state laws and the details of the case.
Sentences are case specific. In some states, first degree murder can be punished with death.
Jurors convicted ex-Manhattan banker Thomas Toolan III of first-degree murder on June 22, 2007 in the October 2004 stabbing death of Elizabeth "Beth" Lochtefeld on Nantucket.
Short of the death penalty it would be life in prison wothout the possibility of parole.