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单词 accomplice
释义

accomplice


ac·com·plice

A0042800 (ə-kŏm′plĭs)n. One who participates in the commission of a crime without being the principal actor.
[Alteration of complice.]

accomplice

(əˈkɒmplɪs; əˈkʌm-) na person who helps another in committing a crime[C15: from a complice, interpreted as one word. See complice]

ac•com•plice

(əˈkɒm plɪs)

n. a person who knowingly helps another in a crime or wrongdoing. [1475–85; a(c)- of unclear orig. + late Middle English complice < Middle French < Medieval Latin complex, s. complic- partner; see complex]
Thesaurus
Noun1.accomplice - a person who joins with another in carrying out some plan (especially an unethical or illegal plan)accomplice - a person who joins with another in carrying out some plan (especially an unethical or illegal plan)confederateassistant, helper, help, supporter - a person who contributes to the fulfillment of a need or furtherance of an effort or purpose; "my invaluable assistant"; "they hired additional help to finish the work"decoy, steerer - a beguiler who leads someone into danger (usually as part of a plot)

accomplice

noun partner in crime, ally, associate, assistant, companion, accessory, comrade, helper, colleague, collaborator, confederate, henchman, coadjutor, abettor His accomplice was arrested after a high-speed car chase.

accomplice

nounOne who assists a lawbreaker in a wrongful or criminal act:accessory, confederate, conspirator.
Translations
同伙帮凶

accomplice

(əˈkamplis) , ((American) -ˈkom-) noun a person who helps another, especially in crime. The thief's accomplice warned him that the police were coming. 幫凶 帮凶

accomplice

同伙zhCN

accomplice


accomplice:

see accessoryaccessory,
in criminal law, a person who, though not present at the commission of a crime, becomes a participator in the crime either before or after the fact of commission. An accessory before the fact is one whose counsel or instigation leads another to commit a crime.
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accomplice


ac·com·plice

(ă-kom'plis), A bacterium that accompanies the main infecting agent in a mixed infection and that influences the virulence of the main organism. [M.E., fr. O.Fr., fr. L. comples, closely connected]

accomplice


Accomplice

One who knowingly, voluntarily, and with common intent unites with the principal offender in the commission of a crime. One who is in some way concerned or associated in commission of crime; partaker of guilt; one who aids or assists, or is an Accessory. One who is guilty of complicity in crime charged, either by being present and aiding or abetting in it, or having advised and encouraged it, though absent from place when it was committed, though mere presence, Acquiescence, or silence, in the absence of a duty to act, is not enough, no matter how reprehensible it may be, to constitute one an accomplice. One is liable as an accomplice to the crime of another if he or she gave assistance or encouragement or failed to perform a legal duty to prevent it with the intent thereby to promote or facilitate commission of the crime.

An accomplice may assist or encourage the principal offender with the intent to have the crime committed, the same as the chief actor. An accomplice may or may not be present when the crime is actually committed. However, without sharing the criminal intent, one who is merely present when a crime occurs and stands by silently is not an accomplice, no matter how reprehensible his or her inaction.

Some crimes are so defined that certain persons cannot be charged as accomplices even when their conduct significantly aids the chief offender. For example, a businessperson who yields to the Extortion demands of a racketeer or a parent who pays ransom to a kidnapper may be unwise, but neither is a principal in the commission of the crimes. Even a victim may unwittingly create a perfect opportunity for the commission of a crime but cannot be considered an accomplice because he or she lacks a criminal intent.

An accomplice may supply money, guns, or supplies. In one case, an accomplice provided his own blood to be poured on selective service files. The driver of the getaway car, a lookout, or a person who entices the victim or distracts possible witnesses is an accomplice.

An accomplice can be convicted even if the person that he or she aids or encourages is not. He or she is usually subject to the same degree of punishment as the principal offender. In the 1982 decision of Enmund v. Florida, 458 U.S. 782, 102 S. Ct. 3368, 73 L. Ed. 2d 1140, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the death penalty could not be constitutionally imposed upon an accomplice to a felony-murder, a crime leading to murder, if he or she had no intention to, or did not, kill the victim. Earl Enmund drove the getaway car from a Robbery that resulted in the murder of its victims, an elderly married couple. Although Enmund remained in the car during the robbery and consequent killings and the trial record did not establish that he intended to facilitate or participate in a murder, the trial court sentenced him to death, along with the persons who actually killed the victims, upon his conviction for robbery in the first degree. In overturning the decision, the Supreme Court reasoned that to condemn such a defendant to death violated the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution, which prohibited Cruel and Unusual Punishment in state prosecutions. The death penalty was an excessive punishment in light of the "criminal culpability" of this accomplice.

Cross-references

Capital Punishment; Criminal Law; Eighth Amendment; Fourteenth Amendment; Sentencing.

accomplice

n. someone who assists in the commission of a crime and, unlike a mere accessory, is usually present or directly aids in the crime (like holding a gun on the bank guard while the vault is looted, or holding a victim of assault and battery). Also unlike an accessory who can claim being only a subordinate figure, the accomplice may share in the same charge and punishment as the principal criminal. (See: accessory)

accomplice

a person who participates in a crime, either by ACCESSION or as a perpetrator, before or after the fact, by committing, procuring or aiding and abetting. Some degree of guilty knowledge is necessary.

ACCOMPLICE, crim. law. This term includes in its meaning, all persons whohave been concerned in the commission of a crime, all particepes crimitis,whether they are considered in strict legal propriety, as principals in thefirst or second degree, or merely as accessaries before or after the fact.Foster, 341; 1 Russell, 21; 4 Bl. Com. 331; 1 Phil. Ev. 28; Merlin,Repertoire, mot Complice. U. S. Dig. h.t.
2. But in another sense, by the word accomplice is meant, one who notbeing a principal, is yet in some way concerned in the commission of acrime. It has been questioned, whether one who was an accomplice to asuicide can be punished as such. A case occurred in Prussia where asoldier, at the request of his comrade, had cut the latter in pieces; forthis he was tried capitally. In the year 1817, a young woman named Leruthreceived a recompense for aiding a man to kill himself. He put the point ofa bistouri on his naked breast, and used the hand of the young woman toplunge it with greater force into his bosom; hearing some noise he orderedher away. The man receiving effectual aid was soon cured of the wound whichhad been inflicted; and she was tried and convicted of having inflicted thewound, and punished by ten years' imprisonment. Lepage, Science du Droit,ch. 2 art. 3, Sec. 5. The case of Saul, the king of Israel, and his armorbearer, (1 Sam. xxxi. 4,) and of David and the Amelekite, (2 Sam. i. 2-16,)will doubtless occur to the reader.

accomplice


  • noun

Synonyms for accomplice

noun partner in crime

Synonyms

  • partner in crime
  • ally
  • associate
  • assistant
  • companion
  • accessory
  • comrade
  • helper
  • colleague
  • collaborator
  • confederate
  • henchman
  • coadjutor
  • abettor

Synonyms for accomplice

noun one who assists a lawbreaker in a wrongful or criminal act

Synonyms

  • accessory
  • confederate
  • conspirator

Synonyms for accomplice

noun a person who joins with another in carrying out some plan (especially an unethical or illegal plan)

Synonyms

  • confederate

Related Words

  • assistant
  • helper
  • help
  • supporter
  • decoy
  • steerer
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更新时间:2025/1/3 11:46:36