Being "guilty" means that a person has been found responsible for committing a crime or offense, typically after a legal trial. Conversely, being "not guilty" indicates that there is insufficient evidence to prove the person's culpability, or that they were acquitted of the charges against them. In a legal context, a "not guilty" verdict does not necessarily mean the person is innocent, but rather that the prosecution failed to meet its burden of proof.
It means that the person was JUDGED and found GUILTY.
It means not guilty of that paticular charge.
Aquitted is a pronouncement of "not guilty." Not guilty is not innocent.
Well the jury decides the verdict, guilty or not guilty. Is that what you mean?
Well the jury decides the verdict, guilty or not guilty. Is that what you mean?
there guilty no matter what and its phrase not phraise
No. Guilty means that the state has declared that you did commit a crime and are legally responsible for it.
Adjudicated guilty means the judge resolved the case and found the defendant guilty. Adjudication is the final action that the judge took.
If you mean CULPABLE, that is guilty or responsible for something that happened.
standing mute means to not plead guilty or not guilty. In the United States when this occurs the judge will enter a plea of not guilty on the defendants behalf.
the oppisate of being guilty of something
It means that either the jury (or judge) found you not to be guilty of the offense for which you were arrested - or - the prosecution failed to prove its case against you. Not guilty does NOT mean the same as being found innocent!