trial contendere.
If you plead nolo contendere this neither admits or denies the charges and you would have no intent on defending yourself. Nolo contendere is treated as a plea of guilty. In the courts of the U.S. you may only plead this with the okay of the court. Advantage... this plea can not be used in a later proceeding against you. A guilty plea may be used. Disadvantage... If the case is not settled by a plea of guilty or nolo contendere, you will start to prepare for a trial.
Nolo contendere means "I will not contest it", it is a plea option. A person that pleas nolo contendere is stating that not gulity or just not willing to answer. Even though someone is has this right they can still be convicted and sentenced.
"No lo contendere," or "nolo contendere," is a legal term derived from Latin meaning "I do not wish to contend." It refers to a plea in criminal cases where a defendant neither admits nor denies the charges but accepts the court's judgment. This plea is often treated the same as a guilty plea for sentencing purposes but cannot be used as an admission of guilt in civil proceedings. It allows defendants to avoid the potential consequences of a trial while still accepting the penalties associated with the charges.
nolo contendere
ut contendere durum
It means "I do not wish to contest" or "no contest" for short.
No.
No, it is a guilty plea
An Alford plea is when a defendant maintains their innocence but admits that there is enough evidence to convict them, while a nolo contendere plea is when a defendant neither admits nor denies guilt but accepts the punishment.
An Alford plea is when a defendant maintains their innocence but admits that there is enough evidence to convict them, while a nolo contendere plea is when a defendant does not admit guilt but accepts the punishment.
A nolo contendere plea means the defendant does not admit guilt but accepts punishment, while an Alford plea means the defendant maintains innocence but acknowledges there is enough evidence for a conviction.
The root word for contentious is "content," which comes from the Latin word "contendere," meaning to strive or compete.