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Criminal law involves prosecution
by the government of a person for an act that has been classified
as a crime. Civil cases, on the other hand, involve individuals
and organizations seeking to resolve legal disputes. In a
criminal case the state, through a prosecutor, initiates the
suit, while in a civil case the victim brings the suit. Persons
convicted of a crime may be incarcerated, fined, or both.
However, persons found liable in a civil case may only have
to give up property or pay money, but are not incarcerated.
A "crime" is any
act or omission (of an act) in violation of a public law forbidding
or commanding it. Though there are some common law crimes,
most crimes in the United States are established by local,
state, and federal governments. Criminal laws vary significantly
from state to state. There is, however, a Model Penal Code
(MPC) which serves as a good starting place to gain an understanding
of the basic structure of criminal liability.
Crimes include both felonies
(more serious offenses -- like murder or rape) and misdemeanors
(less serious offenses -- like petty theft or jaywalking).
Felonies are usually crimes punishable by imprisonment of
a year or more, while misdemeanors are crimes punishable by
less than a year. However, no act is a crime if it has not
been previously established as such either by statute or common
law. Recently, the list of Federal crimes, dealing with activities
extending beyond state boundaries or having special impact
on federal operations, has grown.
All statutes describing criminal
behavior can be broken down into their various elements. Most
crimes (with the exception of strict-liability crimes) consist
of two elements: an act, or "actus reus," and a
mental state, or "mens rea." Prosecutors have to
prove each and every element of the crime to yield a conviction.
Furthermore, the prosecutor must persuade the jury or judge
"beyond a reasonable doubt" of every fact necessary
to constitute the crime charged. In civil cases, the plaintiff
needs to show a defendant is liable only by a "preponderance
of the evidence."
Criminal procedure is composed
of the rules governing the series of proceedings through which
the substantive criminal law is enforced. In the United States,
most crimes are defined by local and state government, though
the federal government has adopted its own criminal code to
deal with activities extending beyond state boundaries or
having special impact on federal operations.
The procedure for criminal
trials in federal courts is outlined in Title 18 of the United
States Code. States also have statutes that set out the framework
for criminal procedure, subject to important constitutional
limits. For example, the Bill of Rights provides basic protections
including the right to an attorney, the right to not testify,
the right to confront witnesses, and the right to a jury trial,
among others. State constitutions may increase, but not take
away from the federal protections.
The American criminal system
is an adversarial and accusatorial model. Criminal procedure
must balance the defendant's rights and the state's interests
in a speedy and efficient trial with the desire for justice.
Therefore, the rules of criminal procedure are designed to
ensure that a defendant's rights are protected.
The rules of criminal procedure
are different from those of civil procedure, because the two
areas (criminal and civil) have different objectives and results.
In criminal cases, the state brings the suit and must show
guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, while in civil cases the
plaintiff brings the suit and must only show the defendant
is liable by a preponderance of the evidence.
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