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perjury |
Also found in: Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.11 sec. |
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perjury (pûr`jərē), in criminal law, the act of willfully and knowingly stating a falsehood under oath or under affirmation in judicial or administrative proceedings. If the person accused of perjury had any probable cause for his belief that the statement he made was true, then he is not guilty of perjury. In U.S. federal law, and in most states, a false statement must be material to a point of inquiry in order to constitute perjury. Perjury is a crime and may be punished by fine or imprisonment. One can retract false testimony in the course of a criminal procedure without committing perjury. The crime of inducing another person to commit perjury is called subornation of perjury. perjuryIn law, act or crime of knowingly making a false statement while under oath. The statement must be material to the issue of inquiry. Perjuries that have the effect of obstructing the adjudication of a case may be given increased punishment for that reason. A person who makes a false statement and later corrects it is usually not considered to have committed perjury. perjury Criminal law the offence committed by a witness in judicial proceedings who, having been lawfully sworn or having affirmed, wilfully gives false evidence Perjury See also Deceit. Hiss, Alger (1904–) imprisoned for perjury during espionage hearings. [Am. Hist.: NCE, 1247] rancher, remembered for his untrustworthy court testimony. [Australian Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 771] worships “tickling Commodity”; perjures himself. [Br. Lit.: King John] How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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The 38-year-old Kilpatrick pleaded guilty last week to two counts of obstruction of justice stemming from false testimony he gave during a whistle-blowers' trial. 17 of giving false testimony against the Syrian government to U. In the end, Mitchell is portrayed as a man who repeatedly served as a restraining influence on the darker urges of Richard Nixon and as a victim of many unfair charges concerning the Watergate affair, although some unpunished crimes are also noted, such as his illegal intervention with South Vietnamese officials at the 1968 Paris peace talks, his false testimony before the Senate concerning the ITT case, and his false statements to the FBI agents investigating the 1969-71 Kissinger wiretaps. |
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