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  1. Victimless crime (3067 bytes)
    1: ...the age of consent. Common examples of victimless crimes are: prostitution, sale of alcohol, illegal drug...
    5: People believe that victimless crimes should be [[decriminalization|decrimimalized for...
  2. Blue-collar crime (2004 bytes)
    1: ...ance of the term blue-collar crime in relation to crimes committed in the streets.
    3: ...ional workers and government officers. These are crimes committed or in line with business activities in...
    7: ... computers in committing the crimes. Blue-collar crimes can be any, but not limited to the following
    16: ...dlines of the newspapers as these are sensational crimes. It grabs the attention of the masses because i...
    18: ...property like theft and shoplifting. Blue-collar crimes can also be directed against other persons such ...
  3. Battery (crime) (1528 bytes)
    1: '''Battery''' is a crime committed by touching another person intentionall...
    3: ...rm against another. It is said that assault is a crime preparatory to the commission of battery.
    7: ... of whether or not there was injury caused. This crime is considered as a misdemeanor and is punishable ...
    9: # Battery involving family is a crime inflicted on immediate members of the family of t...
    23: [[Category:Crimes]]
  4. Crime scene (1860 bytes)
    1: The '''Crime scene''' is the area where an unlawful act took p...
    3: ... of the offender or the victim, a car used in the crime, the parking lot where the victim was last seen, ...
    7: ...stigating and solving a crime. In all cases, the crime scene must be secured so as to preserve any evide...
    9: The condition of a crime scene must be documented as soon as possible to a...
    13: ...cene may consist of all the other areas where the crime may have been perpetrated.
  5. Crime in Australia (2710 bytes)
    1: ...families, mass murderers and drug traffickers. '''Crime in Australia''' has included some sensational and...
    12: .... The man who was found guilty and hanged for the crime was later thought to have been innocent; the Pyja...
    16: ... serial killing. The 1990’s was a busy time for crime including the Backpacker Murders, the killing of ...
    22: [[Category:History of Australia|Crime]]
    23: [[Category:Australia-related lists|Crime]]

Page text matches

  1. Thirteenth Amendment (2073 bytes)
    10: ...involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted,...
  2. Azaria Chamberlain (16278 bytes)
    158: *[[Crime in the Northern Territory]]
    192: [[Category:Crime in Australia]]
  3. Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids (2419 bytes)
    14: *Crime
  4. Mobile office (1425 bytes)
    9: Construction sites, [[crime scene]]s, and [[rescue]] or [[disaster area]]s of...
  5. Informant (2006 bytes)
    1: ...lity of authorities to charge them with a certain crime.
    3: ... of the guilt of the other people involved in the crime they are committing.
    9: ...y themselves have been arrested or charged with a crime. An exception of this is [[terrorist]] organizat...
  6. Victimless crime (3067 bytes)
    1: ...the age of consent. Common examples of victimless crimes are: prostitution, sale of alcohol, illegal drug...
    5: People believe that victimless crimes should be [[decriminalization|decrimimalized for...
  7. Form follows function (5647 bytes)
    1: ... by Adolf Loos's 1908 assertion that 'Ornament is crime', adapted by Frank Lloyd Wright and adopted by Mo...
    7: ...t [[Adolf Loos]], whose 1908 essay ''Ornament and Crime'' was the other battle-cry of architectural moder...
    23: ...argued that form follows function and ornament is crime are not as synonymous as they are perceived to be...
  8. Far East (2379 bytes)
    21: [[War crime|war criminals]]. The usage of the term ''Far East...
  9. Glass ceiling (1511 bytes)
    3: ...ke [[trash collector|garbage collector]], or in [[crime]] and [[prison]].
  10. Hardboiled (2194 bytes)
    1: ...classic American sub-genre of the [[crime fiction|crime]] or [[detective fiction|detective novel]]. The p...
    7: ...the focus in noir is away from the solvers of the crime and their lobby manager and newspaper friends. In...
  11. Culture of fear (3524 bytes)
    14: *Distraction from other issues such as [[crime]], [[education]], [[poverty]], [[pollution|the en...
    21: ...] or certain age groups are blamed en-masse for [[Crime|criminal]] activities, small-scale events are inf...
  12. Deviancy amplification spiral (2671 bytes)
    9: ...edia. The act is generally unusual from typical [[crime]]s. Examples include the following:
    12: *A particularly shocking act of [[Corporate crime|corporate fraud]], such as the [[1990]]s [[Servic...
    20: ... critics, the widespread, inflated reporting of [[Crime|criminal]] activity may lead to the rise of copyc...
  13. Microelectronics (2655 bytes)
    7: ...ns. Security systems, employee identification and crime detection are some of the other fields that use m...
  14. Corporate officer (1520 bytes)
    5: ...ion and any self-serving may even be considered a crime. Positions include the Chief Executive Officer, t...
  15. Sexual assault (2768 bytes)
    11: ...y physical injuries. Do not touch anything on the crime scene. If the nearest hospital emergency room is ...
    18: [[Category:Sex crimes]]
  16. Unemployment (2334 bytes)
    23: ...form of increased poverty, political instability, crime, mental health issues and lowered quality of heal...
  17. Arson (2511 bytes)
    3: Arson is a crime heavily frowned upon and seriously penalized by t...
    13: While the basic elements of the crime of arson involves malice in the burning of a dwel...
    19: ...nce that he used the said materials to commit the crime, unless he can debunk the presumption.
    21: ...gainst one's own property. The penalty for such crime can even be more serious, if it is committed to g...
    23: ... be proved before someone can be indicted for the crime. Malice or spite can be determined through physi...
  18. Blue-collar crime (2004 bytes)
    1: ...ance of the term blue-collar crime in relation to crimes committed in the streets.
    3: ...ional workers and government officers. These are crimes committed or in line with business activities in...
    7: ... computers in committing the crimes. Blue-collar crimes can be any, but not limited to the following
    16: ...dlines of the newspapers as these are sensational crimes. It grabs the attention of the masses because i...
    18: ...property like theft and shoplifting. Blue-collar crimes can also be directed against other persons such ...
  19. Cruelty to animals (2429 bytes)
    1: '''Cruelty to animals''' is a crime punishable under the United States Animal Welfare...
    34: [[Category:Crimes]]
  20. Extortion (1853 bytes)
    13: ...t the form it takes, is considered a white-collar crime. It is usually committed involving professional ...
    25: ...g laws in a particular state or country where the crime was committed. It also depends on the kind or na...
    27: [[Category:Crimes]][[Category:Illegal occupations]]

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