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  2. Intimidation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intimidation

    Acted intimidation in professional wrestling. Intimidation is a behaviour and legal wrong which usually involves deterring or coercing an individual by threat of violence. [1] [2] It is in various jurisdictions a crime and a civil wrong . Intimidation is similar to menacing, coercion, terrorizing [3] and assault in the traditional sense. [note 1]

  3. Threat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Threat

    Threatening or threatening behavior (or criminal threatening behavior) is the crime of intentionally or knowingly putting another person in fear of bodily injury. [ 3 ] Some of the more common types of threats forbidden by law are those made with an intent to obtain a monetary advantage or to compel a person to act against their will .

  4. Harassment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harassment

    Harassment is a specific form of discrimination, [2] [3] and occurs when a person is the victim of unwanted intimidating, offensive, or humiliating behavior. To qualify as harassment, there must be a connection between the harassing behavior and a person's protected personal characteristics or prohibited grounds of discrimination, and the ...

  5. Bullying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullying

    Individual bullying is usually characterized by a person using coercive, intimidating, or hurtful words or comments, exerting threatening or intimidating behavior, or using harmful physical force in order to gain power over another person. [9] A bullying culture can develop in any context in which humans regularly interact with one another.

  6. Police misconduct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_misconduct

    Intimidation and violence against journalists and whistle blowers is high as Russia remains one of the worst countries at solving their murders. [145] It is widely believed the Federal Security Service (successor to the KGB ) remain in control using the police as foot soldiers, and are unaccountable with connections to organized crime and the ...

  7. How We Define Violent Crime in America Shapes Who Gets ...

    www.aol.com/news/define-violent-crime-america...

    The definition of a violent crime turns out to be highly arbitrary, though. Burglaries are treated as violent, for example, even if no one is hurt or threatened, but most assaults don’t qualify ...

  8. Death threat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_threat

    A person commits the crime of coercion if the person compels another to engage in conduct from which there is a legal right to abstain or abstain from conduct in which there is a legal right to engage, by means of instilling in the person who is compelled a fear that, if the demand is not complied with, the person who makes the demand or ...

  9. Stalking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stalking

    Context must be relied on to determine if a specific action is a stalking behavior. [ 11 ] Having been used since at least the 16th century to refer to a prowler or a poacher , the term stalker was initially used by media in the 20th century to describe people who pester and harass others, initially with specific reference to the harassment of ...