Criminal Law
Across
- 4. less serious offense, usually punishable by less than a year in jail, such as simple property damage"
- 9. security may only use the minimum amount of this necessary to control a situation or protect themselves"
- 11. causing bodily harm or making insulting, provoking physical contact with another person"
- 12. severe crime, like armed robbery, where private citizens often have broader legal authority to intervene"
- 13. specific property boundaries where a private security officer has the legal authority to act"
- 14. unauthorized taking of someone else's property with the intention of permanently depriving them of it"
- 15. property directly from a person by using physical violence or the threat of violence"
Down
- 1. an individual knowingly enters or remains on private property after being told to leave"
- 2. that places another person in reasonable fear of receiving an immediate physical injury"
- 3. a building or secure area without permission with the intent to commit a theft or felony inside"
- 5. formal court order requiring a security officer to testify about a criminal incident they witnessed on duty"
- 6. someone into custody, which private security can generally only do if a crime occurs in their presence"
- 7. holding a suspected shoplifter or trespasser while waiting for local law enforcement"
- 8. conscious decision or deliberate state of mind required to commit a criminal act"
- 10. c