offence$54697$ - traduzione in greco
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offence$54697$ - traduzione in greco

Strict liability offence

offence      
n. παράβαση, παράπτωμα, αδίκημα
criminal offense         
  • [[Religious]] sentiment often becomes a contributory factor of crime. In the 1819 anti-Jewish [[Hep-Hep riots]] in [[Würzburg]], rioters attacked Jewish businesses and destroyed property.
  • [[Kang Kek Iew]] before the [[Cambodian Genocide Tribunal]] on July 20, 2009
  • The spiked heads of executed criminals once adorned the gatehouse of the medieval [[London Bridge]].
SINGLE OCCURRENCE OF UNLAWFUL ACT FORBIDDEN AND PUNISHABLE BY CRIMINAL LAW
Criminal; Criminals; Crimes; Criminal offence; Criminal activity; Criminal act; Criminality; Criminally; Offence (law); Criminal offense; Illegal activity; CRIMINAL; Illegal activities; Criminal activities; Offense (law); Lawbreaking; Criminal acts; Criminal behaviour; Criminal behavior; Local crime; Criminal Violence; Criminal offender; Legal offender; Crimes in religion; Breaking the law (legal); Breaking laws; Major crime; Illegal action; Izgrednici; Criminal Offence; Religious crime; History of crime; Crime in ancient Rome; Crime in the Roman Empire; Convicted criminal; Crime in ancient Sumer; Crime in the ancient Near East; Criminal wrong
ποινικό αδίκημα
no parking         
  • Parking tickets on a vehicle in [[Durham, North Carolina]]
  • 2135 photos of illegal parking received by the Portuguese civil organization ''Passeio Livre'' (Free sidewalk) published on their 5th anniversary
  • Parking violation on a [[Lamborghini Aventador]] in Geneva, Switzerland
  • Ireland]]
  • Four parking attendant vehicles and a street cleaning vehicle in San Francisco
  • No waiting
  • No stopping
  • access-date=6 March 2020}}</ref>
  • Vehicles may be [[wheel clamp]]ed for parking violations, such as this [[BMW 5 Series]] in [[Melbourne]], as a penalty or to enforce payment of fines
OFFENCE CAUSED WHILE A VEHICLE IS PARKED
Parking ticket; Parking Ticket; Parking tickets; Parking fines; No parking; No standing; Parking infraction; Parking restriction; Illegal parking; Parking violations; Parking offence; No waiting
απαγορεύεται η στάθμευση

Definizione

Offence
·noun ·see Offense.
II. Offence ·noun A cause or occasion of stumbling or of sin.
III. Offence ·noun The state of being offended or displeased; anger; displeasure.
IV. Offence ·noun The act of offending in any sense; ·esp., a crime or a sin, an affront or an Injury.

Wikipedia

Strict liability (criminal)

In criminal law, strict liability is liability for which mens rea (Law Latin for "guilty mind") does not have to be proven in relation to one or more elements comprising the actus reus ("guilty act") although intention, recklessness or knowledge may be required in relation to other elements of the offense. The liability is said to be strict because defendants could be convicted even though they were genuinely ignorant of one or more factors that made their acts or omissions criminal. The defendants may therefore not be culpable in any real way, i.e. there is not even criminal negligence, the least blameworthy level of mens rea.

Strict liability laws were created in Britain in the 19th century to improve working and safety standards in factories. Needing to prove mens rea on the part of the factory owners was very difficult and resulted in very few prosecutions. The creation of strict liability offenses meant that convictions were increased. Common strict liability offenses today include the selling of alcohol to underage persons and statutory rape.

These laws are applied either in regulatory offenses enforcing social behaviour where minimal stigma attaches to a person upon conviction, or where society is concerned with the prevention of harm, and wishes to maximise the deterrent value of the offense. The imposition of strict liability may operate very unfairly in individual cases. For example, in Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Storkwain, a pharmacist supplied drugs to a patient who presented a forged doctor's prescription, but was convicted even though the House of Lords accepted that the pharmacist was blameless. The justification is that the misuse of drugs is a grave social evil and pharmacists should be encouraged to take even unreasonable care to verify prescriptions before supplying drugs. Similarly, where liability is imputed or attributed to another through vicarious liability or corporate liability, the effect of that imputation may be strict liability albeit that, in some cases, the accused will have a mens rea imputed and so, in theory, will be as culpable as the actual wrongdoer.