The crime of assault is not made any more serious or any less serious if your victim happens to be a doctor. It is generally illegal to assault people and depending upon how much injury the assault causes, serious jail time may result. The only special danger involved in assaulting a doctor might be that if you get a reputation for being hostile to doctors, they may not want to accept you as a patient in the future, if you need medical care. Even then, most doctors do not let their feelings get in the way of treating patients.
Whether you have a criminal record or not, assaulting a police officer is a serious charge. How much time one would get for assaulting a police officer would depend on the state you live in and where the charges were filed.
From an ethical standpoint, there isn't much of a difference. However, legally (and even to some extent ethically) in assaulting a police officer, you are in effect assaulting the government, so the punishment is usually more severe.
ah shi*tyy load of years
about five or six years.
if he was a big mother you would be in a lot of trouble, in law you would probably be done for a serious misdemeanor
The opposite of trouble (disharmony) would be peace or harmony.The opposite of to trouble (make troubled or anxious) would be to ease.The opposite of trouble (having difficulty) would be ease, facility or effortlessness.(Ease and trouble will rarely use the same grammatical structure, because the adjective easy is much more common.)
tupence
what kind of equipment do I need to be a doctor?
It would depend on what kind of doctor you need, what you need them for, and where you are located.
Are you referring to the doctor written paper prescription form itself, or to the bottle of pills? Either would be a violation of law - the actual possession of the pills being more serious.
That depends on how much you earn, what other income you have, and your deductions. The answer varies from one person (doctor) to the next.
it was free