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 California's fake imprisonment - more than you think -2

In most cases, people think about false crimes, people believe that the police are arrested. Most people do not know that under many different circumstances non-police officers are responsible for avoiding criminal penalties.

The purpose of this article is to present a brief overview of civil lawsuits of imprisonment in California.

The basic definition of the prison of civil crime is as follows. "A person who intentionally holds another person within the boundary of the fixed area and has no privilege to do so without the consent of the owner".

For example, a man locks a woman in a room without permission. This is a typical case of civil crime.

Another example is a person who has the intention to stay in a specific place without the consent of the person holding the valuable item and has valuable things to others.

Some civil offenses hold them so that others can grab and leave without consent.

There are many other examples of fake insults that I can offer, but the above example is meant to give you an idea of ​​what a civil lawsuit in criminal offenses in California is .

One of the key elements of civil lawsuits of illegal sentences is that they must believe that the detainees can not reasonably leave them. Rational is the legal term of art used in the legal world. Reasonably, basically, what a reasonable wise person would do and believe under similar circumstances.

Another important element of fraudulent acts of trespass is that the implicant must not have the privilege to do so.

Examples of privileges that make it possible to hold others within the fixed area are the shopkeeper investigating shoplifting in the store, the citizen who witnessed the crime, and the person who committed a felony in arresting the citizen . Or a police officer who is more likely to believe that a crime was done.

Like other deliberate torts, criminal punishment victims may receive not only compensatory damages but also punitive damages. (Punishment)

Norman Gregory Fernandez, ESQ. Copyright 2006




 California's fake imprisonment - more than you think -2


 California's fake imprisonment - more than you think -2

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