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  2. Excuse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excuse

    For example, suppose that a group of terrorists kidnap A's family and instruct A to carry a large bomb into a crowded area as the price for the release of their family. If A carries out these instructions, making no effort to contact the police or to warn those in the danger area, the issue of liability for death and injury resulting depends on ...

  3. Exigent circumstance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exigent_circumstance

    Emergency aid doctrine is an exception to the Fourth Amendment, allowing warrantless entry to premises if exigent circumstances make it necessary. [8] A number of exceptions are classified under the general heading of criminal enforcement: where evidence of a suspected crime is in danger of being lost; where the police officers are in hot pursuit; where there is a probability that a suspect ...

  4. Abuse defense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abuse_defense

    The abuse defense is "the legal tactic by which criminal defendants claim a history of abuse as an excuse for violent retaliation". [2] In some instances, such as the Bobbitt trial, the supposed abuse occurs shortly before the retaliative act; in such cases, the abuse excuse is raised as a means of claiming temporary insanity or the right of self-defense.

  5. 'Boy in the Box' Was Found Slain, Severely Beaten and Nude ...

    www.aol.com/boy-box-found-slain-severely...

    From there, investigators were able to ascertain the child's family — and after obtaining a court order for vital records related to the child's suspected mother, they found Joseph's birth ...

  6. Judge dumbfounded by error at site of 'suicide' where teacher ...

    www.aol.com/judge-dumbfounded-error-suicide...

    A forensic pathologist with the city medical examiner's office at the time, Dr. Marlon Osbourne, initially ruled Greenberg's death a homicide, according to court documents.

  7. Necessity (criminal law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necessity_(criminal_law)

    Emergency law/right (nødret, nødrett) is the equivalent of necessity in Denmark and Norway.[1] [2] It is considered related to but separate from self-defence.Common legal examples of necessity includes: breaking windows and other objects in order to escape a fire, commandeering a vehicle to serve as an emergency ambulance, ignoring traffic rules while rushing a dying patient to a hospital ...

  8. A stowaway on a flight to Paris was released from US federal ...

    www.aol.com/stowaway-flight-paris-faces-court...

    A woman who stowed away on a Delta flight from New York to Paris last week has been released from custody after being charged in federal court, but with more than a dozen conditions.

  9. Justification and excuse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justification_and_excuse

    An example is that breaking into someone's home during a fire in order to rescue a child inside, is justified. If the same act is done in the reasonable but mistaken belief that there was a fire, then the act is excused. What is justified under a utilitarian perspective might be excused under a retributivist standpoint, and vice versa.