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Nolo contendere is Latin for "no contest." In a criminal proceeding, a defendant may enter a plea of nolo contendere, in which he does not accept or deny responsibility for the charges but agrees to accept punishment. The plea differs from a guilty plea because it cannot be used against the defendant in another cause of action.

2006-07-19 16:23:59 · answer #1 · answered by Michelle O 6 · 0 0

No Contest simply means that you're not pleading guilty or not guilty. For a criminal defendant, pleading no contest enables him to deny the act at a later civil trial. An accused may find this useful when the criminal penalties are light compared to the cost of a trial, but the potential civil penalties are great. For example, an actor accused of punching a pushy photographer may plead no contest to the criminal charge of assault and pay a small fine or do community service, and still fight the photographer tooth-and-nail on a million-dollar civil suit.

2006-07-19 16:23:20 · answer #2 · answered by Justsyd 7 · 0 0

It is a plea of "no lo contendre" meaning the defendant neither admits to or denies the charge. By pleading no contest, one can be found guilty in court without ever confessing to a crime. I pleaded "no lo" once to a traffic violation. I wasn't speeding, but the only other witness was the police officer, and I figured I didn't have a chance at "not guilty" yet I didn't want to confess to something I didn't do.Yes, I had to pay the fine!

2006-07-19 16:24:12 · answer #3 · answered by Bad Kitty! 7 · 0 0

It skill i do no longer admit something, yet I won't take care of myself. in case you enter this plea, you would be got here upon accountable. The benefit over a accountable plea is it can't be used against you in a civil case. Edit: Gregg stated: As a lifelike count, a nolo contendre plea is fairly plenty constantly taken and taken care of via the court docket as a plea of accountable. That assertion is a hundred% fake. Delete that assertion and he gave the final answer you are able to assume to work out.

2016-12-10 10:43:26 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The answers you have are correct, it means "no contest", and you do not dispute the charges against you. However, I would make absolutely certain that if you do that it is in your best interest. You didn't indicate what kind of criminal proceeding nor if it is a misdemeanor or felony nor your age. I think knowing that would make a great difference in answering your question, as well as, did you commit the offense?

2006-07-19 16:56:49 · answer #5 · answered by D 4 · 0 0

It means that the accused agrees to no defence for himself...

The accused might be guilty or innocent, but does not see a point
of spending time and money to argue in court...

Some attorneys will advise their client to such, either because
they are actually guilty, of that but also other things... or, their
client is innocent but it may still turn out to be a guilty verdict
because the defense proofs are too weak to be certain of the
non-guilty verdict outcome...

When not guilty, it is not the actual best way to get rid of the
procedure... It still shows on records and most eyes would see
this as a guilty easy-out...

Better seek several attorneys in such case to see for the
best possible defence, if really not guilty...

When guilty, it is actually difficult to prove innocence... and then
the penalty would be stronger if proven guilty...

2006-07-19 16:40:28 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no contest means you are not saying you are guilty or innocent. you are basically leaving that decision up to the judge and/or jury. It is similar to an "Alford Plea".

2006-07-19 16:22:24 · answer #7 · answered by J Somethingorother 6 · 0 0

It means the prosecution has enough evidence that they can likely convict you but you still don't claim to be guilty.

2006-07-19 16:21:49 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It is like an Alford Plea. You don't fight the charge but you don't admit any guilt.

2006-07-19 16:22:41 · answer #9 · answered by acmeraven 7 · 0 0

It means you don't argue with whatever you are being charged with or sued over.

2006-07-19 16:21:28 · answer #10 · answered by ladyangelovely 4 · 0 0

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