"Rationales?" How about GREED.
No. Burglary IS a criminal offense. ATTEMPTED Burglary is an attempt crime.
Conspiracy, Attempt and Solicitation: Conspiracy-agreeing to the crime Solicitation-asking another to commit the crime Attempt- the closest inchoate crime to actually carrying out the crime
Criminal attempt is when an extraneous factor interrupts the defendant's attempt to commit a crime. The sentencing would be dependent on the actions of the defendant, and how close he or she came to committing the crime.
There is no such thing. Even if the crime was unsuccessful in being carried out, the attempt to commit it satisfies the legal requirement of a criminal act accompanied by a criminal intent.
no
An attempt to steal is commonly referred to as theft or burglary, depending on the specific circumstances of the crime.
There is no distinction - all criminal offenses embody, as part of the statute, an "Attempt" to commit the same crime (e.g.: ATTEMPT Robbery - ATTEMPT Burglary - ATTEMPT Homicide - Etc). Just because a plan or an attempt was unsuccessful, or did not come to fruition, does not mean you are "home free" with no chargeable offense.
When drafting legal documents or the like, use red for issues and questions, black for your rationales, and blue to document the opposition's rationales regarding the topic.
Depends upon what crime you're soliciting. If you're soliciting a serious crime, then the penalty is usually the same as conspiracy or attempt to commit that crime, even if the underlying crime is not completed.
Crime prevention is the attempt to reduce victimization and to deter crime and criminals. It is applied specifically to efforts made by governments to reduce crime, enforce the law, and maintain criminal justice.
Intent involves knowing and deliberate actions that move to the end goal of the crime. In criminal law, even if the crime was not culminated (i.e., because the person was caught in the act), the intent serves sufficient to fine/jail/and or incarcerate an individual - the attempt shows an intent to fulfill the crime. To act by intention or design;