Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Florencia Ucha, in Mar. 2014
A crime is that action, or failing that, deliberate omission to the normative in force and that will then receive a punishment, because in effect it is typified and punished in the right. It is also possible that the crime is the consequence of a imprudence, that is, there was no prior intention to contradict the law but he did it anyway and must be sanctioned as if it had been.
There is a variety of crimes that will be differentiated based on certain characteristics and issues that we will list below.
By form of guilt we meet at willful crime (the person responsible wanted to commit the crime, there is conscience between his act and what he wanted) and to guilty (In this case, the person responsible did not want to commit the crime voluntarily, but it is due to not having fulfilled the duty to present care)
Refering to form of action is it so: by commission (there is a rule that punishes an action and is still contravened), by omission (the person responsible refrains from doing something that he should do and causes the crime),
by default (an action that the norm requires is omitted) and by improper omission (as a result of an omission the crime is consummated)Y for the damage they cause may be injury or danger. In the first type, there is visible damage to the property, while in the second it is not necessary that the action cause the damage of an object but it is enough that the object in question has been subjected to some danger.
On the other hand and beyond what awaits those who commit a crime at the judicial level, it is important to mention that the crime will also be condemnable from the social sphere and from the point of view moral. No one who respects the laws and the rule of law he will accept or agree to a crime. For example, whoever commits a crime is awaited by legal punishment but also by social condemnation.
It should be noted that the word is also used as a synonym for crime.
Topics in Crime