Archive for the ‘Utah Legal Definition’ Category

Utah Definition: Conspiracy

Jesse Nix, Utah Criminal Defense Lawyer, on the topic of  Utah Law, Utah Legal Definition
0comment

Photo: Vardhana

Utah defines the crime of conspiracy as an agreement with two or more people to do something illegal.  Usually, there has to be an “overt act” in order to charge a person with conspiracy.  For instance, if two people planned on putting graffiti on the Utah Capitol building but never did anything besides talk about it, prosecutors would not likely charge these two people with conspiracy.  If the two people actually bought spray paint, this would be an “overt act” that would allow prosecutors to charge them with conspiracy.

An overt act isn’t required if the offense involved in the conspiracy is a capital felony, a felony against a person, arson, burglary, or robbery.  In these cases, just conspiring to commit them is illegal and punishable.

U.C.A. 76-4-201: Conspiracy
For purposes of this part a person is guilty of conspiracy when he, intending that conduct constituting a crime be performed, agrees with one or more persons to engage in or cause the performance of the conduct and any one of them commits an overt act in pursuance of the conspiracy, except where the offense is a capital felony, a felony against the person, arson, burglary, or robbery, the overt act is not required for the commission of conspiracy.

Utah Definition: Public Urination

Jesse Nix, Utah Criminal Defense Lawyer, on the topic of  Utah Legal Definition
0comment
Photo: Troy Holden

Photo: Troy Holden

If you can’t hold it anymore and think you can go on the side of a public building in Salt Lake City, try to hold the urge to urinate a little longer and find a bathroom.  Utah’s public urination law will give you a Class C misdemeanor if police see you urinating or defecating in a public place other than a public restroom.

There is a loophole in the law, however, because if you urinate in a public place and the under circumstances which the you should know will NOT likely cause affront or alarm to another, then you will be okay.  Utah law requires that the defendant know that the public urination will “cause affront or alarm to another” person.

However, it’s safer (and more sanitary) to simply find a public restroom.

U.C.A. 76-9-702: Lewdness – Public Urination

(5) A person is guilty of public urination if the person urinates or defecates: (a) in a public place, other than a public rest room; and(b) under circumstances which the person should know will likely cause affront or alarm to another. (6) Public urination is a class C misdemeanor.

Utah Definition: Forgery

Jesse Nix, Utah Criminal Defense Lawyer, on the topic of  Utah Law, Utah Legal Definition
0comment
Photo: Jack Spades

Photo: Jack Spades

Forgery is the process of creating, modifying, or imitating objects or documents with the intent to deceive or commit fraud.  Utah takes forgery seriously and therefore makes a violation of the law a third degree felony.  The law doesn’t differentiate between a person forging a $10 check or a $5,000 check—both forgeries will result in a third degree felony.

The picture on the right shows what a forged check could possible look like. This check had one hundred dollars added to its original value of sixty five. The top is under visible light (looking at it with the naked eye it is really difficult to tell where text was added). The bottom image is under infrared light which clearly shows the distinction between the two pens used to write the check.

U.C.A. § 76-6-501: Forgery
(2) A person is guilty of forgery if, with purpose to defraud anyone, or with knowledge that he is facilitating a fraud to be perpetrated by anyone, he: (a) alters any writing of another without his authority or utters the altered writing; or (b) makes, completes, executes, authenticates, issues, transfers, publishes, or utters any writing so that the writing or the making, completion, execution, authentication, issuance, transference, publication, or utterance: (i) purports to be the act of another, whether the person is existent or nonexistent; (ii) purports to be an act on behalf of another party with the authority of that other party; or (iii) purports to have been executed at a time or place or in a numbered sequence other than was in fact the case, or to be a copy of an original when an original did not exist.

What is Double Jeopardy?

Jesse Nix, Utah Criminal Defense Lawyer, on the topic of  Constitutional Rights, Utah Legal Definition
0comment

The double jeopardy rule arises from the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, the relevant clause of which reads:

“nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb”

This clause is intended to limit abuse by the government in repeated prosecution for the same offense as a means of harassment or oppression. It is also in harmony with the common law concept of res judicata which prevents courts from relitigating issues which have already been the subject of a final judgment.

There are three essential protections included in the double jeopardy principle, which are:

•            being retried for the same crime after an acquittal

•            retrial after a conviction

•            being punished multiple times for the same offense

This rule is occasionally referred to as a legal technicality because it allows defendants a defense that does not address whether the crime was actually committed. For example, were police to uncover new evidence conclusively proving the guilt of someone previously acquitted, there is little they can do because the defendant may not be tried again—at least not on the same or a substantially similar charge. Fong Foo v. United States, 369 U.S. 141 (1962).

Although the Fifth Amendment initially applied only to the federal government, the US Supreme Court has ruled that the double jeopardy clause applies to the states as well.

Jeopardy attaches in a jury trial once the jury and alternates are impaneled and sworn in.  In a non-jury trial, jeopardy attaches once the first evidence is put on which occurs when the first witness is sworn

(Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_jeopardy#United_States)

Utah Definition: Citizen’s Arrest

Clayton Simms, Criminal Defense Attorney, on the topic of  Utah Crime News, Utah Law, Utah Legal Definition
2comment

A citizen’s arrest is an arrest made by someone who is not a law enforcement official.  In Utah, you are allowed to make a citizen’s arrest when a crime is committed or attempted in your presence, or when a felony is committed and the citizen has reasonable cause to believe that the person they want to arrest committed the felony.

However, just because Utah gives a citizen the right to make a citizen’s arrest, it does not mean that citizens should be assisting law enforcement all the time.  A person making a citizen’s arrest could expose himself to possible lawsuits by the arrestee or criminal charges if the arrest was done improperly (assault, false imprisonment, kidnapping, or wrongful arrest).

Consider what happened to a man who tried to make a citizen’s arrest of Governor Herbert while he was running for Lieutenant Governor in 2004.

U.C.A. § 77-7-3: Arrest by Private Persons

A private person may arrest another: (1) For a public offense committed or attempted in his presence; or (2) When a felony has been committed and he has reasonable cause to believe the person arrested has committed it.

Utah Definition: Retail Theft

Jesse Nix, Utah Criminal Defense Lawyer, on the topic of  Utah Law, Utah Legal Definition
1comment
Photo: epSos.de

Photo: epSos.de

There are many ways in which you could be charged with retail theft in Utah.  Here are some of the more typical ways that you will get in trouble:

  • Knowingly conceal merchandise to carry it away without paying.
  • Knowingly carry away merchandise without paying.
  • Knowingly alter, transfer, or remove a price tag from merchandise and attempt to purchase the item at less than the price tag said.
  • Knowingly put merchandise into a container to deprive the merchant of retail value of the merchandise.
  • Knowingly under-ring merchandise as to not pay full price.
  • Knowingly remove a shopping cart from a retail establishment

See U.C.A. § 76-6-602.

If you have been charged with retail theft in Utah, contact a qualified attorney who can help defend you against this charge.

What are the Potential Penalties in Utah for Misdemeanor Offenses?

Clayton Simms, Criminal Defense Attorney, on the topic of  Crimes, Utah Legal Definition
0comment

A misdemeanor offense is any crime that has a potential jail sentence of one year or less.

Misdemeanors are also broken down into three classes. The most serious is a Class “A” misdemeanor, followed by Class “B” and Class “C”. There is also a class of crimes referred to as infractions which is least serious of all offenses.

The maximum penalties for misdemeanors and infractions in the State of Utah are as follows:

A Class “A” misdemeanor carries a sentence of up to one year in the county jail plus a $2,500 fine.

A Class “B” misdemeanor carries a maximum sentence of up to one hundred and eighty days in the county jail plus a $1,500 fine.

A Class “C” misdemeanor carries a maximum sentence of up to ninety days in the county jail plus a $750 fine.

An Infraction carries a maximum sentence of a $750 fine.

Remember if convicted, you may also be ordered to pay restitution and depending on which court you have been charged in, an additional 95% surcharge may be added to your fine.

What is the Difference between Utah State Court Criminal Charges and Utah Federal Court Charges?

Clayton Simms, Criminal Defense Attorney, on the topic of  Legal Process, Utah Court, Utah Law, Utah Legal Definition
0comment

In the United States we have state courts and federal courts. These two types of courts operate independently of each other. The vast majority of criminal cases are brought in state courts.

The Utah State legislature decides what will and will not be a violation of the state criminal law. By comparison, the United States Senate and House of Representatives determine what will and will not be a violation of the federal criminal law. The United States Constitution places limitations upon the federal government’s ability to pass criminal laws.

In order for a particular activity to be a violation of federal criminal law, there must be some connection between the activity and a substantial federal interest such as interstate commerce, interstate travel, national defense, or international affairs. Despite these limitations, the federal criminal code has grown more expansive to the point where there are substantial overlaps between state and federal criminal law. Despite the constitutional prohibition on double jeopardy, an individual under certain circumstances may be prosecuted in both the federal and state criminal justice systems for essentially the same conduct. While that is a rare situation, it underscores the point that the state and federal criminal justice systems are independent from one another.

The Utah State and Federal criminal justice systems are different in three ways that are important to the person who has been charged with a crime: First, the punishment is usually much more severe in Federal Court; second, because of the severe punishment a defendant is generally less likely to risk going to trial and more likely to enter into a plea bargain in the Federal system; third, there are fewer cases in the Federal system, as a result Federal prosecutors vigorously prosecutor each and every case. Don’t forget Federal prosecutors have the financial resources and the investigative power of the U.S. Government behind them.

Utah Legal Definition: Dangerous Weapon

Jesse Nix, Utah Criminal Defense Lawyer, on the topic of  Utah Legal Definition
0comment

Photo: mr.smashy

Utah’s statute defining dangerous weapon is very broad.  It not only covers the use of an actual weapon, but fake weapons as well.  If a defendant takes a toy gun that leads a victim to believe that it is real, the law will treat them the same as if the defendant did have a real gun.  The statute goes further in that the defendant doesn’t even have to show the toy gun—she could simply verbally tell the victim that she is in control of a real gun.

Utah Code § 76-1-601(5): Definition of Dangerous Weapon

(5) “Dangerous weapon” means:
(a) any item capable of causing death or serious bodily injury; or
(b) a facsimile or representation of the item, if:
(i)    the actor’s use or apparent intended use of the item leads the victim to reasonably believe the item is likely to cause death or serious bodily injury; or (ii) the actor represents to the victim verbally or in any other manner that he is in control of such an item.

Utah Legal Definition: Disorderly Conduct

Clayton Simms, Criminal Defense Attorney, on the topic of  Utah Law, Utah Legal Definition
0comment

If you were a member of the Utah Legislature and wanted to create a statute that was a catch-all for criminal activity, you would create Utah’s disorderly conduct statute.  It allows for police to arrest you for multiple reasons for ambiguous actions, such as knowing creating a “hazardous” condition that serves “no legitimate purpose,” or making “unreasonable” noises in a public place.  What do those parts of this Utah statute mean?  It means whatever an arresting police officer determines those words to mean.

Utah Code § 76-9-102: Disorderly conduct.

(1) A person is guilty of disorderly conduct if: (a) he refuses to comply with the lawful order of the police to move from a public place, or knowingly creates a hazardous or physically offensive condition, by any act which serves no legitimate purpose; or (b) intending to cause public inconvenience, annoyance, or alarm, or recklessly creating a risk thereof, he: (i) engages in fighting or in violent, tumultuous, or threatening behavior; (ii) makes unreasonable noises in a public place; (iii) makes unreasonable noises in a private place which can be heard in a public place; or (iv) obstructs vehicular or pedestrian traffic.      (2) “Public place,” for the purpose of this section, means any place to which the public or a substantial group of the public has access and includes but is not limited to streets, highways, and the common areas of schools, hospitals, apartment houses, office buildings, transport facilities, and shops. (3) Disorderly conduct is a class C misdemeanor if the offense continues after a request by a person to desist. Otherwise it is an infraction.

Disorderly Conduct is often plead to when plea bargaining with the prosecutor. Disorderly Conduct looks and sounds better on your criminal history than assault or criminal mischief.

If you have been charged with Disorderly Conduct in Utah, then you need to hire the best Utah criminal lawyer to help you.