Felony: Misdemeanor, And An Infraction

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Differentiate among and provide an example of a felony, a misdemeanor, and an infraction.
A Felony is defined as a criminal offense in which can be punishable by death or incarceration for the minimum of a year. One could acquire a felony charge by illegally possessing a firearm with a previous felony conviction. A misdemeanor is a lot less serious than a felony but still punishable by three-hundred-sixty-four days or less in a jailing facility. A misdemeanor could be acquired in actions of a crime like assault. An infraction is the smallest occurrence and is issued for an offense like speeding. Most of the time these results in minor fines or other form of non-incarceration punishment. In some jurisdiction reserve the right to limited jail time if they prefer.

You have been charged with the crime of burglary. Provide possible defenses your attorney might use in court. These defenses range from claiming actual innocence to admitting the behavior in question but arguing that it didn't in fact constitute burglary.
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I would argue this because, I personally would never burglarize anything for the simple fact that I like the feeling I get when I work for my stuff and would feel like a horrible person if I took it from someone who worked for it. If it happened to be a rare occasion where something happened by mistake and I accidentally somehow burglarized someone I would have my attorney argue that it was a mistake of fact and what was taken was thought to be mine or free in some sort of fashion. I know these would work because as long as I act with integrity I will never land myself into much trouble because I never set out with a purposeful passion to commit a