You can be charged with murder if there is evidence that you have committed murder - you dont necessarily have to have killed someone - you may be framed. Also, say you are robbing someone and someone is killed in the process, you may be charged with felony murder in it blood?
Yes, a mistrial does not mean he was found not guilty.
A person may be retried for the same offense as long as he has not been acquitted of that offense in a previous trial. A person who has been acquitted may not be tried for the same offense.
Under American law, a person "cannot be tried twice for the same offense"; that is, for the same single incident. If a person is acquitted of murder, that does not mean they cannot be tried for (and convicted of) another murder. (They can also be found guilty of other crimes stemming from the first incident, but they cannot be retried once acquitted.)
No, not unless there is new evidence. To retry a person for a crime who has all ready been found guilty or innocent is double jeopardy and not allowed under the constitution.
Yes, a person can be retried with new evidence presented in a case, as long as the new evidence was not available during the original trial and could potentially change the outcome.
Went to jail and died there in 1967. His conviction for premeditated murder was overturned but he died of a blood clot and cancer before it could be retried.
Double jeopardy forbids that he can be retried.
Yes, in some cases, a person can be retried if they are acquitted, but only under certain circumstances such as new evidence coming to light or a mistrial being declared. Double jeopardy laws prevent individuals from being tried for the same crime twice in most situations.
It depends on the proof and witnesses of murder.
Yes, only if person dies from injuries sustained from the attempted murder of that person.
In some countries, not all, that is the law. A person may not face double jeopardy for a crime for which they have been acquitted.
Double jeopardy means being tried in the same court for the same crime without new evidence. This is unconstitutional in the United States. Sometimes a person who is acquited of a crime like murder in a criminal court can be retried in a civil court for denying the civil rights to the victim. The case of O.J. Simpson is a recent example.