Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on False Imprisonment, Robbery And Larceny. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. The writer briefly discusses the difference between larceny/robbery and kidnapping/false imprisonment. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCFalseImpr.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
one distinguishing marker that illustrates this error is how kidnapping requires the victim to be moved from the original location where the altercation occurred to another, entirely different place; as
such, Ray was arrested under a more serious felony he did not commit when what he did do was perpetrate false imprisonment. This more accurate charge requires only that
a victim be restrained against his or her will, which may or may not also include movement from one place to another. Moreover - unlike with kidnapping - the
use of physical force is not a prerequisite to being charged with false imprisonment, inasmuch as "threats or a show of apparent authority are sufficient" (NOLO, 2007) in carrying out
the crime. Had Ray imposed any violent treatment upon Martha during the course of their argument and had then locked and barricaded the bedroom door, he would have also been
caught in what Sanders (2003) points out as the double offense inherently associated with the fine line between kidnapping and false imprisonment. However, Ray did not engage in any
violent acts and is clearly guilty of the lesser crime of false imprisonment. II. DEFINING ROBBERY AND LARCENY Law enforcement utilizes official terminology when identifying criminal acts, while the
general public uses more common terms for the same thing. Larceny - the formal equivalent of stealing - is defined as the wrongful taking and removing of another individuals
personal property with the intent to either modify or deny the owner of it. Criminal punishment for larceny is based upon the property value of what has been stolen;
anything worth more than one thousand dollars is constituted as grand larceny (OConnor, 2007). By contrast, robbery is larceny taken to another level: when the act of theft is accompanied
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