No. Although crime is crime, when a minor commits it it is generally referred to in a general sense as :juvenile crime."
It's a little complicated to explain but an "inchoate offense" is a type of crime that is committed when you are contemplating the commission of another crime.
It is conduct that is deemed criminal without actual harm being done, provided that the harm that could have occurred is prevented by law.
The prosecution
In criminal court. There is the prosecution and the defense.Added: In a civil case it is the Plaintiff and the Defendant
that is called coercion, or if the facts allow, you could also say the crime was committed under duress
There is no such thing as a criminal lawsuit. Criminal prosecutions are brought by the state through the appropriate prosecution, and are not called lawsuits. Lawsuits are civil suits, that are, by definition, not criminal.
No. If police get called, you go to jail. Criminal law does not depend on the nationality or the status of the victim.
This would depend on local legal custom and terminology. Some terms would include "deferred prosecution" or "suspension in contemplation of dismissal."
A person who commits sin is called a sinner.
It depends on what kind of case it is. In a criminal case the parties are called prosecutor and defendant; in a civil case they are the plaintiff and the defendant; and in family law they are the petitioner and respondent.
That will depend on whether the case is a civil or criminal trial. In a civil court case the two sides are the defendant and the plaintiff. For a criminal court it will be the defendant (the accused) and the government entity bringing the charges, usually the State or Country.
Misdeamor or felony.
a tort.
Assailant