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In theory, you get it back. In reality, you only get it back if you are found "not guilty". Oh, you might get it back if found "guilty", but usually the state, as part of the sentencing, will impose a fine equal to the bail money, so they don't have to return it.
Holy Thursday is the Thursday before good Friday, that is the day Jesus was arrested and brought to trial and found guilty, the following day (Good Friday) he was crucified.
True
No. Trial is a noun, or an adjective, meaning "test".
Errors that do not affect the trial balance errors that affect the outcome of the trial balance
Casey Anthony was found Not Guilty of all federal charges against her, and found Guilty on the misdemeanor charges of providing false information to law enforcement. The verdicts on all charges are as follows: First-Degree Murder: Not Guilty Aggravated Child Abuse: Not Guilty Aggravated Manslaughter: Not Guilty 4 Charges of Providing False Information to Law Enforcement: Guilty
She was found guilty after the trial and was executed.
A person is never found innocent. A person is found guilty or not guilty at the verdict phase of a criminal trial.
You go to trial, and you're either found not guilty or guilty. If found guilty, you'll serve time.
The person in a criminal trial is the defendant. When found guilty, the person is convicted and sentenced. The person then becomes an inmate or convict in the prison system.
Yes. As of June 25, 2008, Neil Entwistle was found guilty of murdering his wife and infant daughter.
No, You will not be sentenced until after the trial and if you're found guilty of a crime.
No it doesn't. A person found not guilty of murder can't be tried again for that same crime a second time under double Jeopardy.However, a person can be granted a new trial, or a re-trial, if they were found guilty but that would not be double jeopardy.
He has had several so I'll go in chonological order: His criminal murder trial he was aquitted. His wrongful death civil trial he was found guilty of the deaths of ex-wife Nicole Brown and her friend Ron Goldman. His kidnapping and armed robbery trial he was found guilty.
Yes, there is a difference. Pleading guilty is a voluntary admission of guilt by the defendant, whereas being convicted means that the court has found the defendant guilty after a trial or plea.
Assuming you're asking about Chase's impeachment trial in the Senate, he was found not guilty (no one is ever found innocent) of the charges against him in 1805.
He was found not guilty during a criminal trial for the offense but was found culpable for the offense during a later civil trial brought by the victim's parents.