Embezzlement is the act of dishonestly appropriating or secreting assets, usually financial in nature, by one or more individuals to whom such assets have been entrusted.[1] ...
Embezzlement n. the crime of stealing the funds or property of an employer, company or government or misappropriating money or assets held in trust. Legal-Explanations.com Home ...
EMBEZZLE - The wrongful or willful taking of money or property belonging to someone else after the money or property has lawfully come into the possession or control of the person taking it.
Embezzle The illegal transfer of money or property that, although possessed legally by the embezzler, is diverted to the embezzler personally by his or her fraudulent action.
embezzler n. a person who commits the crime of embezzlement by fraudulently taking funds or property of an employer or trust.
embezzlement - The fraudulent appropriation by a person to his own use or benefit of property or money entrusted to him by another. eminent domain - The power to take private property for public use by the state and municipalities.
EMBEZZLEMENT, crim. law. The fraudulently removing and secreting of personal property, with which the party has been entrusted, for the purpose of applying it to his own use.
Embezzle The illegal transfer of money or property to one's own use in violation of trust. The money or property may be legally in the possession of the embezzler but not his property.
Embezzle Definition - Transitive Verb [Anglo-French embeseiller to make away with, from en-, prefix stressing completion + beseller to snatch, misappropriate, from Old French, to destroy] ...
See also: burglary embezzlement larceny robbery The People's Law Dictionary by Gerald and Kathleen Hill Publisher Fine Communications ...
Expanded Legal Definition of Electronic MonitoringEmbezzle The illegal transfer of money or property that, although possessed legally by the embezzler, is covertly and fraudulently converted to the embezzler's own property.
An example is embezzlement or securities fraud. Economic Loss Rule The economic loss rule prevents plaintiffs from double-dipping. Many times plaintiffs file an action for breach of contract and also for negligence in performance of the contract.
The same punishment is applicable when not upon active service to a second offence of desertion or fraudulent enlistment (i.e. enlistment by one who already belongs to the service), certain embezzlements of public property, ...
For example, if a defendant who is accused of embezzling $2 million in 1996 denies that she embezzled $2 million during that year, ...
Crimes commonly found in the felony category include murder, kidnapping, armed robbery, embezzlement, rape, treason, fraud, grand theft, arson, racketeering, some instances of drug possession, and the third or fourth O.V.I.
If a man accused of embezzling money from his company had made several big-ticket purchases in cash around the time of the alleged embezzlement, that would be circumstantial evidence that he had stolen the money.
The technical word charging felonious appropriation in embezzlement; in larceny the words are "take and carry away". 7.
See also: Person, Law, Property, State, Money
 
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