Criminal Law

Criminal Law
The imposition of most laws under threat and threat of criminal penalties, and their main points and details differ from one place to another. It is not possible in various ways to limit the criminal law in the whole world to the smart record. However, some aspects of criminal law can be mentioned as follows:

 

criminal elements

The Criminal Code prohibits unnecessary judicial procedures and consequences. Therefore, proving the crime requires evidence of its occurrence. Legal scholars refer to this as the basic requirement to condemn the "guilty act" (Latin: Actus Reus). Some crimes - traffic violations, for example - do not need such a degree of proof. Rather, they are known as bearing full responsibility for committing violations (according to the Public Roads Law 1988 - the driver of a vehicle under the influence of alcohol is fined when he exceeds the permissible speed). Because of the potential judicial consequences, judges in common law now seek intent to prove the offense, which is called the conviction of intent,That is, the guilty mind (Latin: Mens Rea). Since all crimes require the condemnation of the act and intent, most judges have agreed on the importance of the presence of all the elements at the same moment, and that it is not sufficient for them to necessarily occur in order at different times.