#1
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Legal Terminology For Murder
Is there a difference between "Capital Murder" and "First Degree Murder," or are these just two ways of referring to the same thing?
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#2
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Re: Legal Terminology For Murder
capital offenses refer to ones where you are put to death if convicted. I'm not sure murder 1 is a capital crime in all states. In any case the legal term for murder is homicide.
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#3
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Re: Legal Terminology For Murder
They are overlapping terms that are sometimes synonymous. It varies from state to state. "Capital" means that it is punishable by the death penalty. "First degree" has to do with the level of intent and premeditation. In most states with the death penalty, the death penaty only applies to first degree murder.
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#4
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Re: Legal Terminology For Murder
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#5
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Re: Legal Terminology For Murder
I think a capital murder case is one involving the death penalty as in the line of duty killing of a cop. First degree murder means the crime was pre-meditated as opposed to a crime of passion.
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#6
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Re: Legal Terminology For Murder
[ QUOTE ]
In any case the legal term for murder is homicide. [/ QUOTE ] Thats not true. Homicide just means killing someone. Murder is an illegal homcide. If I kill someone in self-defense, it is a homicide, but not murder. |
#7
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Re: Legal Terminology For Murder
there arent special laws for killing cops, they just throw the book at you.
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#8
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Thanks you Guys
n/m
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#9
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Re: Legal Terminology For Murder
i suppose your right
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#10
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Re: Legal Terminology For Murder
I am sure people use the terms loosely or whatever. But a capital crime refers to a death penalty case. In the US the only death penalty cases are first degree murder cases basically. But not all first degree murder cases are death cases. Different states define first degree murder differently. Shorthand it means you really meant to do it. Thought about it ahead of time and did it. Or there might be other things defined in a state's statute that might make it 1st degree, say killing a kid or a cop or something. Death case in the US there has to be something that aggravates the crime further. So out of the cold blooded premeditated pool of murders you need somethng that makes it worse. And of course a state can have first degree murder and not have the death penalty, ergo no capital murder.
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