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soldi70 [24.7K]
3 years ago
8

What is a common element in federal criminal cases but not necessarily in civil

History
2 answers:
Sphinxa [80]3 years ago
6 0

<u>Answer:</u>

<em>(D) The federal government is always the plaintiff. </em>

<em></em>

<u>Explanation:</u>

The parties in a case are known as the plaintiff party, who brings the complaint, and the defendant. In a case, an examiner from the head prosecutor's office, speaking to the state or national government, brings criminal allegations.

Civil cases consistently include at any rate one gathering making claims against another or various parties. The individual sues for cash or some other cure that doesn't send the other party to prison. Cases looking for divorces, building up responsibility for the property, or looking for an order are altogether incorporated into the group of typical situations. Little claims are one sort of common cause.

frez [133]3 years ago
4 0

<u>Answer:</u>

<em>D. The federal government is always the plaintiff.</em>

<u>Explanation:</u>

In federal criminal cases, only the government is allowed to commence a criminal case, <em>through the Attorney’s office, working in close ties with the appropriate law enforcement. </em>

The main actors of a federal criminal case are the grand jury and the prosecutor. The attorney or the prosecutor represents the government in court proceedings and prosecutions.

<em>The Jury then reviews the evidence shown by the attorney and makes a decision.</em>

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Methods dictators used after WWI to rise to power
allsm [11]

Dictatorships are often unexpected.  They have arisen among prosperous, educated and cultured people who seemed safe from a dictatorship – in Europe, Asia and South America.

Consider Germany, one of the most paradoxical and dramatic cases.

During the late 19th century, it was widely considered to have the best educational system in the world.  If any educational system could inoculate people from barbarism, surely Germany would have led the way.  It had early childhood education -- kindergarten.  Secondary schools emphasized cultural training.  Germans developed modern research universities.  Germans were especially distinguished for their achievements in science – just think of Karl Benz who invented the gasoline-powered automobile, Rudolf Diesel who invented the compression-ignition engine, Heinrich Hertz who proved the existence of electromagnetic waves, Wilhelm Conrad Rőntgen who invented x-rays, Friedrich August Kekulé who developed the theory of chemical structure, Paul Ehrlich who produced the first medicinal treatment for syphilis and, of course, theoretical physicist Albert Einstein.  It’s no wonder so many American scholars went to German universities for their degrees during the 19th century.

After World War I, German university enrollment soared.  By 1931, it reached 120,000 versus a maximum of  73,000 before the war.  Government provided full scholarships for poor students with ability.  As one chronicler reported, a scholarship student “pays no fees at the university, his textbooks are free, and on most purchases which he makes, for clothing, medical treatment, transportation and tickets to theaters and concerts, he receives substantial reductions in price, and a student may get wholesome food sufficient to keep body and soul together.”

While there was some German anti-Semitic agitation during the late 19th century, Germany didn’t seem the most likely place for it to flourish.  Russia, after all, had pogroms – anti-Jewish rioting and persecution – for decades.  Russia’s Bolshevik regime dedicated itself to hatred – Karl Marx’s hatred for the “bourgeoisie” whom he blamed for society’s ills.  Lenin and his successor Stalin pushed that philosophy farther, exterminating the so-called “rich” who came to include peasants with one cow.

8 0
2 years ago
Read 2 more answers
What happened in 1803 that nearly doubled the size of the United States?
goblinko [34]

Correct answer:  A. President Jefferson purchased the Louisiana Territory from France.

Explanation:  

Initially, President Thomas Jefferson had commissioned James Monroe and Robert Livingston to negotiate a deal with France to acquire New Orleans or all or part of Florida, as a means of avoiding the potential of an armed conflict in such areas. Monroe and Livingston were authorized to spend up to $10 million.  What they found out was that Napoleon was already set to sell a much wider range of territory to the United States, to finance his European wars.  Napoleon was asking $22 million for the whole territory that became the Louisiana Purchase.  The US team negotiated the price down to $15 million.  The deal with France was made in 1803.

Then, however, there was a constitutional crisis back home.  Did the President have the authority under the constitution to make such a major addition to the nation's territory and spend the nation's funds to do so? Ultimately, Jefferson was convinced by his Cabinet members and sent the measure to Congress for approval.  In a statement he made at the time, Jefferson justified the purchase with this analogy:  "“It is the case of a guardian, investing the money of his ward in purchasing an important adjacent territory; and saying to him when of age, I did this for your good." 


4 0
2 years ago
What event is considered the end of the cold war and why?
Olenka [21]

The falling of the Berlin War ended the cold war.

<u>Explanation:</u>

The Berlin War was a symbol of communism that was majorly the propaganda of the cold war. The fall of the Berlin War led to opening of borders and the free elections held ousted the Communist party which meant an end of Communism.

This therefore was the end of the cold war. In 1991, when the Soviet Union dissolved into component elements, the big power ceased to exist and therefore ended the cold war and also the dominance of the Soviet Union.

6 0
3 years ago
By 1935 the proportion of women workers in the USSR’s workforce was in every five.
Katarina [22]
Your answer option B two
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What are the causes of world war one. be sure to include a thesis statement.
Pepsi [2]

Answer:The real causes of World War I included politics, secret alliances, imperialism, and nationalistic pride. However, there was one single event, the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria, which started a chain of events leading to war.

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