English term
prosecuted
- clients who have been prosecuted for financial crimes;
It is part of a list of restricted clients (to be accepted).
> My question is, whether "prosecuted" means you've only ever been prosecuted, or have you been found guilty?
Because of prosecution only still possible to be found innocent.
Thank you!
3 +7 | accused of a crime | Mihaela C N Plamadeala |
4 | accused, but not convicted | Júlia Castro |
Reference for Adrian | AllegroTrans |
Non-PRO (2): Edith Kelly, Yvonne Gallagher
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Responses
accused of a crime
To prosecute means to officially accuse someone of committing a crime in a law court, or to try to prove that a person accused of committing a crime is guilty of that crime12345. It can also mean to follow through or carry forward something undertaken or begun, usually to its completion2. The word comes from the Latin "prosesutus," meaning "follow after"5.
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/prosecut...
If the person is prosecuted, they become a defendant in court. If they either plead guilty or are found guilty by magistrates or, for more serious offences, a jury, they become an offender and will be sentenced by the court.
https://www.sentencingcouncil.org.uk/sentencing-and-the-coun...
accused, but not convicted
Bob was prosecuted for shoplifting, but was not convicted as there were not enough evidence.
Thank you! |
neutral |
AllegroTrans
: All of this has already been explained in Mihaela's answer
47 mins
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Reference comments
Reference for Adrian
So are they all wrong?
At court: Being a Defendant in the Crown Court
United Kingdom Government
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk › file › a...
You could be facing time in prison. Your defence team (a solicitor and/ or a barrister) work for you. They will argue your case for you in court.
5 pages
They are responsible for preparing the court and making sure that everything is in the right place at the right time and that everybody involved in the hearing is there. The defendant is the person who has been accused of the offence. The defendant sits in the dock and sometimes a uniformed officer sits near to them.
Who's who in the Crown Court | Sentencing Council
How the courts work
Metropolitan Police
https://www.met.police.uk › advice › going-to-court
A person accused of a crime is called a 'defendant'. The authority responsible for prosecuting the case in court is called the 'prosecutor'. In most cases that ...
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