Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Publication Year
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 13 of 13
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Difficulties Which Oppose The Application Of Texts Of Robbery Crime Upon Computer Programs- الصعوبات التي تعترض تطبيق نصوص جريمة السرقة على برامج الحاسب الآلي, Mohammed Hammad Al Hiti
The Difficulties Which Oppose The Application Of Texts Of Robbery Crime Upon Computer Programs- الصعوبات التي تعترض تطبيق نصوص جريمة السرقة على برامج الحاسب الآلي, Mohammed Hammad Al Hiti
UAEU Law Journal
We started this article by an introduction regarding the importance of Computer, its parts, and the meaning of program and its sorts. In Chapter One we talked about the firmness of the utility of (money) on Computer programs, this chapter consists of three sections, in sec. 1 we talked about the attitudes of legislations regarding the firmness of the utility of (money) on Computer programs, these legislations are quite differed in their definition to robbery and its applications on the concept of money and things, we also detailed that computer has its own material and semantic identity. In sec. 2, …
United States - Mexican Relations - 1981 Convention For Recovery And Return Of Stolen Vehicles And Aircraft - Agreement Replaces 1936 Convention And Clarifies Process For Recovery Of Stolen Vehicles, J. Kennard Neal
Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law
No abstract provided.
Easing The Tension Between Statutes Of Limitations And The Continuing Offense Doctrine, Jeffrey R. Boles
Easing The Tension Between Statutes Of Limitations And The Continuing Offense Doctrine, Jeffrey R. Boles
Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy
This Article is the first to analyze comprehensively the relationship between the continuing offense doctrine and criminal statutes of limitations. The continuing offense doctrine is a powerful tool for prosecutors who face statute of limitations challenges. It functions to delay the running of statutes of limitations for certain crimes by postponing the completion of those crimes. In order to trigger the operation of the doctrine, a court must conclude that a particular crime is a “continuing offense” for statute of limitations purposes. Identifying what crimes are continuing offenses has been a problematic exercise for federal courts, leading to a growing …
Reviving Lenity And Honest Belief At The Boundaries Of Criminal Law, John L. Diamond
Reviving Lenity And Honest Belief At The Boundaries Of Criminal Law, John L. Diamond
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
It is a common misconception that there is a line between criminal and innocent conduct that is transparent and fixed. In fact, much of criminal law is fluid and elastic, free, if strategically applied, to label conduct as legal or illegal. In some cases, this reflects crimes that are vaguely defined or imprecise. In other cases, the prohibited conduct simply includes what is so conventionally accepted as legal that the criminal label is perceived as inapplicable until a prosecutor chooses to apply it. The problem of a fluid rather than a fixed line for criminality is that prosecutorial discretion becomes …
Electronic Data: A Commentary On The Law In Virginia In 2007, Hon. Thomas D. Horne
Electronic Data: A Commentary On The Law In Virginia In 2007, Hon. Thomas D. Horne
University of Richmond Law Review
No abstract provided.
Password Theft: Rethinking An Old Crime In A New Era, Daniel S. Shamah
Password Theft: Rethinking An Old Crime In A New Era, Daniel S. Shamah
ExpressO
This is a discussion of the legal and economic ramifications of password theft.
Embezzled Funds As Taxable Income: A Study In Judicial Footwork, Jerome B. Libin, George R. Haydon Jr.
Embezzled Funds As Taxable Income: A Study In Judicial Footwork, Jerome B. Libin, George R. Haydon Jr.
Michigan Law Review
The James case might not be worthy of extensive comment if its only significance rested on the decision that embezzled funds constitute taxable income in the year of misappropriation. But close analysis of the five separate opinions that were written indicates that James may have considerable significance beyond its precise holding.
Internal Affairs Of Labor Unions Under The Labor Reform Act Of 1959, Archibald Cox
Internal Affairs Of Labor Unions Under The Labor Reform Act Of 1959, Archibald Cox
Michigan Law Review
The Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959 has two main divisions. One deals with the internal affairs of labor organizations and, incidentally, with certain dishonest practices in labor-management relations tending to corrupt union officials. The other deals with labor-management relations as such. This article is confined to the first branch.
The Procedural Problem Resulting From The Distinction Between Larceny And Embezzlement - Nolan V. State, Charles Cahn Ii
The Procedural Problem Resulting From The Distinction Between Larceny And Embezzlement - Nolan V. State, Charles Cahn Ii
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
Taxation-Income Tax-Embezzled Funds As Income, Milton D. Solomon S.Ed.
Taxation-Income Tax-Embezzled Funds As Income, Milton D. Solomon S.Ed.
Michigan Law Review
In the tax year in question, the taxpayer embezzled funds that came into his hands in his capacity as a bookkeeper for a transfer and warehouse company in Reno, Nevada. He lost practically all of this money in various gambling houses. The taxpayer was convicted and sentenced for the crime of embezzlement and was paroled in 1943. The Commissioner determined that the taxpayer was required to report the amount embezzled in 1941 as income received in that year and asserted a tax deficiency. The Tax Court sustained the Commissioner and the circuit court of appeals reversed. Held, the embezzled …
Another Larceny-Embezzlement Case
Another Larceny-Embezzlement Case
Indiana Law Journal
Notes and Comments: Criminal Law
Criminal Law-Embezzlement-Intent To Defraud
Embezzlement-Required Application Of Section More Specifically Applying To The Accused
Embezzlement-Required Application Of Section More Specifically Applying To The Accused
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.