Answer:
Criminal
A person found guilty may be executed as punishment
A verdict of guilty must be reached “beyond a reasonable doubt”
The state is always the prosecution
Both
A defendant is guaranteed the wright to have a lawyer represent him/her
Tried before a jury
Civil
The Plaintiff is the victim of the wrongdoing
A person found guilty may have to pay money for their wrongdoing (could be both, however, not 100% sure. In some criminal cases, a judge can sentence the guilty to repay victims.)
A verdict of guilty must be reached “by a preponderance of evidence”
The Plaintiff may receive direct compensation for being wronged
Explanation:
He was endeavoring to share academic research journal to the general population for free.
The government arraignment included what was described by various pundits as a "cheating" 13-tally arraignment and "overeager" indictment for affirmed PC wrongdoings, brought by previous U.S. Lawyer for Massachusetts Carmen Ortiz.
Swartz kicked the bucket by suicide on January 11, 2013. After his passing, government prosecutors dropped the charges. On December 4, 2013, because of a Freedom of Information Act suit by the examinations supervisor of Wired magazine, a few records identified with the case were discharged by the Secret Service, including a video of Swartz entering the MIT arrange wardrobe.
Large corporations who had the most to gain in eliminating the barriers of trade.
Answer:
Because it wasn't relevant to the topic.
Explanation:
<u>An attention getter, as the name suggests, has the purpose of engaging one's audience at the beginning of the speech.</u> There are several types of attention getters. Some people choose to make a light a joke, others ask a question to make their audience members reflect on the subject or feel curious as to what the answer will be.<u> No matter which type, the attention getter must always be relevant to the topic.</u> The information Hector offered is nothing but trivia; it does not have any importance when it comes to space tourism, especially if thrown at the audience right from the start, without contextualization.