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  2. Texas Penal Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Penal_Code

    The first codification of Texas criminal law was the Texas Penal Code of 1856. Prior to 1856, criminal law in Texas was governed by the common law, with the exception of a few penal statutes. [3] In 1854, the fifth Legislature passed an act requiring the Governor to appoint a commission to codify the civil and criminal laws of Texas.

  3. Culpability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culpability

    In criminal law, culpability, or being culpable, is a measure of the degree to which an agent, such as a person, can be held morally or legally responsible for action and inaction. It has been noted that the word, culpability, "ordinarily has normative force, for in nonlegal English, a person is culpable only if he is justly to blame for his ...

  4. Texas land survey system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_land_survey_system

    The Texas Land Survey System is often measured in Spanish Customary Units. The most important of these is the vara, which, while ambiguous in the past, was legally established to be exactly 33 + 1 ⁄ 3 inches (846.67 mm) long in June 1919. [2] The subdivision levels in Texas are as follows: [3]

  5. Criminal negligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criminal_negligence

    The degree of culpability is determined by applying a reasonable-person standard. Criminal negligence becomes "gross" when the failure to foresee involves a "wanton disregard for human life" (see the definitions of corporate manslaughter and in many common law jurisdictions of gross negligence manslaughter ).

  6. Good-faith exception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good-faith_exception

    Prominent Fourth Amendment scholar Wayne LaFave argues that the degree of culpability (e.g., negligent vs. intentional) has not previously been within the calculus of deterring police misconduct, and that a constitutional violation does not merit less scrutiny because it was the result of merely negligent behavior.

  7. Federal judge blocks enforcement of controversial Texas ...

    www.aol.com/federal-judge-blocks-enforcement...

    A federal judge in Austin, Texas, ordered the state government Thursday to suspend enforcement of a controversial law that allowed state law enforcement agents to arrest and detain people they ...

  8. 3 Cracker Barrel Employees Fired After Refusing to Seat Group ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/3-cracker-barrel-employees...

    Three employees at a Maryland Cracker Barrel have reportedly been dismissed after staff refused to seat a group of students with special needs on Dec. 3

  9. Murder in Texas law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_in_Texas_law

    The felony murder rule in Texas, codified in Texas Penal Code § 19.02(b)(3), [2] states that a person commits murder if he or she "commits or attempts to commit a felony, other than manslaughter, and in the course of and in furtherance of the commission or attempt, or in immediate flight from the commission or attempt, the person commits or attempts to commit an act clearly dangerous to human ...