Aggravated Assault
Assault is a crime in which someone threatens or intends to commit violence against another person. In the United States, aggravated assault is a more serious form of assault in which a person wants to inflict severe harm upon another person, or threatens them with a deadly weapon, such as a gun. In 2005 alone, there were a reported 862,947 aggravated assaults.
If you have been charged with aggravated assault, you can be thrown in jail. Should you be charged with this crime, it can stay on your record permanently. If you or someone you know has been jailed for aggravated assault, contact Austin jail release lawyer Ian Inglis today at 512-472-1950.
What Qualifies as Aggravated Assault
In most cases, the determining factor between assault and aggravated assault is that the latter involves a higher degree of severity, such as using a gun, knife, ax, or other type of weapon that can easily take someone's life. However, there are several other circumstances that can raise the level of this crime, including:
- Assault that causes serious injury to someone
- Assault against a witness or informant in a case
- Assault against a governmental employee who is doing his or her duty
Although a person may not seriously injure another during an assault, even if it is just a threat and nothing actually happens, a person can still be charged with aggravated assault. For example, if someone is stabbed with a knife during a confrontation, it may not hit any vital organs, but prosecutors can argue that the knife was capable of severely wounding a person if it had entered the body in another place.
Contact Us
Aggravated assault can be a very serious charge. For more information regarding this crime, contact Austin jail release lawyer Ian Inglis today at 512-472-1950.
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