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         Oklahoma Law Criminal Code:     more detail
  1. Oklahoma Criminal code: With annotations to Oklahoma criminal reports by Willam Frank Durham, 1921

41. Poker Pages: Poker Articles: Home Poker
Home Poker. Home Poker and the law Back to Top The criminal code of the State of oklahoma. Section 941 immediately spells out that the punishment for
http://www.pokerpages.com/articles/homepoker/law.htm
Basic Info The Rules
Ranking of Hands

Poker Glossary

History of Poker
...
Home Poker
Tournament Gallery World Series
World Poker Tour

World Poker Open

Research Videos and Audios
Casino Profiles

Poker Chips

Search: Poker Pages The Internet Worldwide Tournaments Cardroom Directory ... Poker Live Tournament Info: Daily Results New Schedules Last Month This Month ... Next Month Home Poker and the Law Click on one of the listings below to view that region's criminal laws regarding Home Poker (or home gambling in general). Note that home gambling falls under some country's national laws and some country's state laws. Depending on the region, some jurisdictions offer more detailed explanation of the act of home gambling than others. Alaska Criminal Law Article 2 (Gambling Offenses) in Chapter 66 (Offenses Against Public Health and Decency) states that it is an offense to engage in unlawful gambling, BUT that it is an "affirmative defense" to prosecution for the person to claim having been part of a "social game". A "social game" is defined as gambling in a home where no house player (barring Home Craps and other home casino games), no house bank, and no house odds exist, and where there is no house income (rake) from the operation of the game. No House and no rake means that home gambling is a defense against unlawful gambling, and legal in the state of Alaska.

42. ABA Criminal Justice Section - Criminal Justice Magazine - Spring 2000
of a criminal court using criminal procedures under the criminal code. He elaborated that according to oklahoma law, a juvenile offender cannot be
http://www.abanet.org/crimjust/cjmag/15-1/butts.html
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Criminal Justice Section
Criminal Justice Magazine
Criminal Justice Magazine
Spring 2000
Vol. 15, Issue 1 Can We Do Without Juvenile Justice? By Jeffrey A. Butts
To satisfy constituent demands for stronger crime policies, elected officials throughout the U.S. are gradually dismantling the juvenile justice system and replacing it with a pseudocriminal system, one that emphasizes mandatory sentences and formal, adversarial procedures. Large portions of the juvenile court's original caseload have already been re-assigned to the criminal court. Is the separate, juvenile justice system still feasible? If not, what can replace it? Policymakers need to confront these questions, and they need innovative answers. New policies should aim for more than simply abolishing the juvenile court's delinquency jurisdiction and sending all young offenders to conventional criminal courts. A compelling argument can be made for abolishing the juvenile justice system, or more specifically, abolishing delinquency, the idea that young offenders aren't fully responsible for their behavior and should be handled in a separate court system. Abolishing delinquency is not the same thing as abolishing the entire juvenile court. Even if lawmakers ended the juvenile court's jurisdiction over criminal law violations, the juvenile court could continue to handle other types of cases (e.g., abused and neglected children, truants, curfew violations). In fact, youthful offenders could continue to be handled by the same judges in the same courtrooms that handle them now, but the courts would operate as youth divisions of a criminal court using criminal procedures under the criminal code.

43. STATE STATUTE & LEGISLATURES DIRECTORY
State code of criminal law and Procedure (Title 35) State Evidence code (Title 34; Session laws Ohio Revised code. oklahoma Constitution, statutes
http://www.lawresearch.com/v2/statute/statstat.htm
LAW RESEARCH
INTERNATIONAL LAW UNITED STATES LAW LAW SEARCH ENGINE ALADDIN'S ... State Governors
State Agencies Legislation Supplemented by "bill related documents that were either added or replaced in the archives since yesterday morning" Constitution, codes

44. The Law Offices Of Jones, Otjen, Davis, Nixon And Juhl - Enid, Oklahoma
The law Offices of Jones, Ojten, Davis, Nixon and Gungoll. Enid, oklahoma. The federal tax statues and the United States criminal code provide for a
http://www.stephenjoneslaw.com/criminal-tax-investigation
Criminal Tax Investigation
The federal tax statues and the United States Criminal Code provide for a variety of criminal charges related to all aspects of taxation. Charges usually center on the failure to file returns, filing materially false returns and tax evasion. It is vitally important that the taxpayer seek competent legal assistance as soon as he/she believes a tax investigation is forthcoming. The sooner counsel is on board, the greater the benefit to the client. Follow the links below for more information on tax enforcement.

45. Policy Regarding Abuse Of Minors By Church Personnel
Because of the provisions of Canon 220 of the code of Canon law which deals Title 10 oklahoma Statues Section 7302. Abuse In criminal law child abuse
http://www.catharchdioceseokc.org/policy.htm
Back to the Oklahoma City Archdiocese Page Abuse of Minors Pastoral Response Hotline ARCHDIOCESE OF OKLAHOMA CITY POLICY REGARDING THE ABUSE OF MINORS BY CHURCH PERSONNEL Children are among our very greatest gifts from God. They are entrusted to their parents, families, and churches to be educated and formed in the ways of Christ and His Church. Indeed the call to share the Faith with our children is among the most sacred duties of the clergy and lay faithful alike. It is also true that children are vulnerable and must be protected from evil. Our churches have been viewed as safe places and Catholics have placed a sacred trust in their clergy and lay ministers. For this reason we are appalled and deeply anguished when we learn that this sacred trust has been violated by clergy or lay ministers who have abused children entrusted to their care. In the years that this policy has been in force it has evolved as our understanding and awareness of sexual abuse of minors has evolved. What was once thought to be a rare if not unheard of crime has now proven to be a far more prevalent and complex evil in our world. Our sincere and heartfelt apology for past crimes, for past failures to respond effectively and for failures to initiate appropriate preventative measures requires us to develop and update policies that address these issues. We must note too that efforts at preventing abuse of minors are more fundamental than this policy which outlines our response to allegations of abuse. For this reason we ask that all Catholics work aggressively with Church leadership in their parishes and in our Archdiocese in those efforts aimed at preventing abuse. Cooperating with tasks such as reference checks, background screening, and following appropriate guidelines and policies when dealing with children are all of the greatest importance. However, when efforts at prevention fail us we need a clear and consistent approach to respond appropriately to an actual allegation of sexual misconduct.

46. LexisNexis Customer Service Center
/Area of law By Topic/criminal law/Administrative Materials Regulations/State/ This file contains documents from the oklahoma Administrative code.
http://w3.nexis.com/sources/scripts/info.pl?247386

47. LexisNexis Customer Service Center
/Area of law By Topic/criminal law/Statutes Legislative Materials/State all laws enacted during a legislative session. The oklahoma code group
http://w3.nexis.com/sources/scripts/info.pl?4679

48. Why Is It A STATE Computer Crimes Code?
The state of oklahoma’s laws, for example, only apply to conduct and/or One reason for returning to a model of state criminal law enforcement is the
http://cybercrimes.net/99MSCCC/Ques5.html
Why is it a STATE Computer Crimes Code (isn’t federal law better?)? The United States of America has laws that exist at two entirely distinct levels: federal law and state law. See, e.g., NGA: Principles for State-Federal Relations of the Bill of Rights of the U.S. Constitution; See generallly National Conference of State Legislatures Federal laws apply throughout the entire geographical nation; state laws only apply in the geographic territory of each state. The state of Oklahoma’s laws, for example, only apply to conduct and/or persons located within the state of Oklahoma at the time an offense was committed and/or at the time the offender is prosecuted. For many years, federal law has been used to address new problems that arise in the United States. In the 1930’s, for example, Congress adopted a federal kidnapping statute - popularly known as "the Lindbergh Law" – which was designed to let federal authorities step in and pursue kidnappers once they had crossed a state border with their victim. See 18 U.S. Code section 1201

49. 7/8/04 - Court Rejects Use Of European Human Rights Law To Establish Fetal Right
11/16/2004 Discriminatory oklahoma law Put on Hold State Agrees Not to not considered a person entitled to protection under France’s criminal code.
http://www.crlp.org/pr_04_0708france.html

Contact Us
2005 Press Releases 2004 Press Releases 2003 Press Releases ... join mailing list Court Rejects Use of European Human Rights Law to Establish Fetal Rights Learn more In a case that could have undermined abortion rights across Europe, today the European Court of Human Rights refused to treat a fetus as a person under the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. The Court upheld a 1999 decision by France’s highest court in the case of Vo v. France . The Center for Reproductive Rights filed an amicus brief with the Court, arguing that granting a fetus the right to life would allow legal claims that favor the rights of a fetus over those of a pregnant woman. In 1991, a French doctor negligently ruptured the amniotic sac of Thi-Nho Vo, a 36-year-old woman who was five months pregnant. The doctor had mistaken her with another patient seeking the removal of a contraceptive coil. His negligence forced an emergency abortion and Vo’s loss of her fetus. The French Court of Cassation ruled that the doctor could not be charged with unintentional homicide because the unborn fetus was not considered a person entitled to protection under France’s criminal code. Vo then took the case to the European Court, arguing that the European Convention on Human Rights guarantees all persons the right to life, and that this guarantee applies to fetuses. The European Court refused to extend the right to life to unborn fetuses. It reasoned, "firstly, that the issue of such protection has not been resolved within the majority of the Contracting States themselves…and, secondly, that there is no European consensus on the scientific and legal definition of the beginning of life." The Court further noted that "the life of the foetus was intimately connected with that of the mother and could be protected through her."

50. CRIMINAL LAW: LawResearch
crime, criminal law, prison, felony, conviction, parole, rights, police, arrest, oklahoma criminal code Oregon criminal code (see Chapters 161169)
http://www.lawresearchservices.com/firms/practice/ctcrime.htm
LAW RESEARCH
Mainstreet Attorney Directory LawResearch Library Membership ... MORE CRIMINAL LAW LINKS
CRIMINAL LAW

51. James M. Inhofe - U.S. Senator - Oklahoma
of the United States criminal code for Forgery and Counterfeiting. There needs to be a federal law prohibiting such forgery generally so that
http://inhofe.senate.gov/pressreleases/forgery.htm
CRIMINALIZING FORGERY OF FEDERAL DOCUMENTS
Senate Floor Statement by
U.S. Sen. James M. Inhofe(R-Okla)

September 28, 2004 INTRODUCTION
Mr. President, the recent CBS incident involving the record of President Bush's service in the Texas Air National Guard sheds light on the need for a federal statute generally criminalizing the forgery of federal government documents. I believe that when it comes to crimes involving the fabrication of federal documents or writings, the federal government has an obligation to step in and show the offenders there are serious consequences.
Many experts initially doubted the authenticity of the memos in question, which negatively and falsely characterized President Bush's time in the Texas Air National Guard. We now believe these memos were created on a modern word-processing computer, rather the 1970s era typewriter as alleged in the original CBS story.
Lieutenant Colonel Jerry Killian was George Bush's commanding officer during his service in the Air National Guard in the 1970s. Unfortunately, Lt. Col. Killian passed away in 1984 and therefore could not defend his records.
However, Colonel Killian's secretary, Marion Knox, typed all of his correspondence between 1956 and 1979. Referring to the memos in question she said, "I know I didn't type 'em." It is clear that the documents CBS shared with American voters were more than suspect. After the fact-since CBS could not verify its reporting-I am pleased to see that CBS has belatedly retracted its story.

52. Rhode Island News | Projo.com | The Providence Journal | Digital Extra
The crackdown after the bombing in oklahoma City The 1996 law makes deportation The current US criminal code (Title 8), as revised by the two laws,
http://www.projo.com/cgi-bin/include.pl/specials/deportados/0618law.htm
projo.com
Digital Extra
2005 EPpy Winner Best Overall Newspaper Site Providence, R.I., Customize E-mail newsletters E-cards MySpecialsDirect ... More subscriber services
The crackdown after the bombing in Oklahoma City
The 1996 law makes deportation mandatory for any alien who has been sentenced to a year or more in prison, even if that sentence is suspended.
In 1996, Congress, reacting in part to the terrorist bombing one year earlier at the federal building in Oklahoma City, undertook a revision of immigration laws.
As a result, two laws were passed: the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act and the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act. These two laws substantially revise Title 8 of the U.S. Criminal Code, a section that governs, among other things, the responsibilities and operations of the federal Immigration and Naturalization Service.
Each law is hundreds of pages long and includes scores of provisions that range from the establishment of new border-control mechanisms to the elimination of certain welfare benefits for illegal aliens.
Both before 1996 and since, all aliens classified as "aggravated felons" were subject to deportation. The laws changed the definition of what constitutes an aggravated felony. They also stripped federal immigration judges of all discretion in those cases and made the deportation of aggravated felons mandatory.

53. Template2
editor, oklahoma law Review; former partner, Bonds, Matthews to the United Nations; member, Supreme Court Committee to revise Mississippi criminal code;
http://www.olemiss.edu/depts/law_school/04-05 VIEWBOOK/faculty.html
FACULTY
Leaders in teaching, research, and service The greatest resource at the School of Law is its faculty. In teaching, scholarship, and service to the profession and the public, the law faculty are leaders.
The wealth of experiences and expertise of the current faculty is evident in the classroom. From corporate counsel to public defenders, from U.S. Supreme Court and Court of Appeals clerks to consultants on constitutional rights, from leaders of the state bar association to leaders in law reform, all segments of law practice and the law profession are represented. The law faculty, individually and as a whole, have a commitment to excellence in the classroom and continued contribution to their respective fields of expertise.
Perhaps most unique at the Law School is the accessibility of the faculty. An open-door policy prevails throughout the school. Students get to know their professors, and professors get to know their students. Pervasive throughout the academic program is a dedication to the quality of the educational and learning experience of each of our students.
DONNA D. ADLER

54. SMO: Beyond Print 05/00
and adds theft of intangible computer property to the state s criminal code. oklahoma law makes it illegal to place the name of a third party in the
http://www.securitymanagement.com/library/000866.html
Beyond Print
In addition to " Hot Topics " numerous resources that supplement the print magazine are available only online. Those related to the May issue (highlighted by the @ symbol in the magazine) are listed below. We welcome your comments on any topics. Please e-mail the editor at sharowitz@asisonline.org.
Other News of Interest
Links to Resources mentioned in Departments and Columns
News and Trends Home on the Page
  • Infrastructure protection. National Plan for Information Systems Protection calls for initiatives to protect against threats to the public and private information systems that are critical to the welfare of the United States. But according to

55. Oklahoma Farm Bureau - Oklahoma Farm Bureau Policies
Make My Day lawWe desire to see the Make My Day law expanded to allow We recommend the juvenile criminal code be strengthened so that juveniles are
http://www.okfarmbureau.org/about/policies_2002_080.asp
Oklahoma Farm Bureau Policies for 2002
COURTS/PENAL SYSTEM 80 The Judiciary 80.1 Supreme Court Terms We favor limiting the terms of state Supreme Court judges to a maximum of 16 years with mandatory retirement at 75 years of age. Judicial Review We recommend that the committee currently being considered to study the reformation of our current judicial system in Oklahoma should include at least one-third lay people in addition to attorneys, judges and legislators, to get a full scope opinion of our legal system. Judges We believe District and Associate District Judges should continue to be elected. Hold-Harmless Payments The state court system shall be required to continue to fund county government for so-called hold harmless payments to compensate for loss of revenue from justice of peace courts and county courts; also portion of utility and janitorial bills for court occupied areas. Make My Day Law We desire to see the "Make My Day" law expanded to allow easier access for permits to carry weapons, also providing extended protection to the victim. We should have the right to protect our property and lives without fear of prosecution. We endorse and request the continued firm enforcement of laws and ask for the right to use force to protect our private property, including deadly force if needed. Criminal Litigation We recommend setting limits on the rights of criminals presently incarcerated to litigate against the prison system.

56. LII: State Statutes By Topic
Crimes and Punishments (see Title 9) criminal code (see Title 9a) For the marriage, divorce, and adoption laws of the states see the LII table pages
http://straylight.law.cornell.edu/topics/state_statutes2.html
Law about...
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Topical Index:
State Statutes on the Internet (Part II)
[To return to Part I and the index of topics, click here
Criminal Code
Criminal Procedure
Education

57. LII: State Statutes By Topic
Business and Professions code; Civil code; Civil Procedure; Commercial law; Corporations; Corrections; Courts and Court Officers; criminal code
http://straylight.law.cornell.edu/topics/state_statutes.html
Law about...
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Topical Index:
State Statutes on the Internet
Most but not all state statutes on the Internet are organized along lines fitting the following topical breakdown.
[For a full listing of State Statutes on the Net, click here
State Statutes on the Internet by Topic
Agriculture
Alcoholic Beverages
Alternative Dispute Resolution

58. Criminal Justice Resources : Criminal Law
The University of oklahoma provides the criminal codes of the American Indian Nations. The Buffalo criminal law Center also has models of criminal codes and
http://www.lib.msu.edu/harris23/crimjust/crimlaw.htm
CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESOURCES:
Criminal Law AELE Law Library
List of Police and Public Safety Law Materials

http://www.aele.org/mstrlist.html

Annotations, articles, books/ booklets, catalogs, law review articles/ notes, and reports gathered by Americans for Effective Law Enforcment.
(Last checked 08/05/05) Buffalo Criminal Law Center
http://wings.buffalo.edu/law/bclc/resource.htm

(Last checked 08/05/05) Constitutional Guide to the Use of Cellmate Informants
http://www.lectlaw.com/files/cri19.htm

Article by Kimberly A. Crawford, FBI Academy Legal Instructor, courtesy of 'Lectric Law Library.
(Last checked 08/05/05) Criminal Code and Procedure: State by State http://www.law.cornell.edu/topics/state_statutes2.html#criminal_code Courtesy of the Cornell University Legal Information Institute. (Last checked 08/05/05) Criminal History Investigations: The Key To Locking Up The Repeat Offender http://www.lectlaw.com/files/cjs11.htm Article by Arthur L. Bowker, from FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, October 1995? courtesy of 'Lectric Law Library. (Last checked 08/05/05) Criminal Law: An Overview http://www.law.cornell.edu/topics/criminal.html

59. Oklahoma -- Sources [ ALSO! -- U.S. Law ]
Court of criminal Appeals—Unpublished Opinions oklahoma Indigent See also links to all oklahoma lawreview web sites as well as links to web sites
http://www.lawsource.com/also/usa.cgi?ok

60. Criminal Law--Assignments Archive
College of law / West Virginia University Fall, 2004. Archives Statutes in which the state s criminal code ( Crimes and Their Punishment ) is located.
http://myweb.wvnet.edu/~jelkins/crimlaw/assign_archives.html
Criminal Law
James R. Elkins
College of Law / West Virginia University
Fall, 2005
Archives Background Readings for Criminal Law Read the West Virginia Jury Instruction: Charge to the Jury Read enough of the " Background Readings " on the course web-site so that you have a basic understanding of the "criminal justice system. As the semester progresses, you should read Chapter 1, in Joshula Dressler, Cases and Materials on Criminal Law 1-120 (Thompson/West, 3rd ed., 2003) [hereinafter Dressler] [Note: Further background readings may be assigned as the semester progresses.] Tuesday, August 23, 2005: Introduction to Homicide Background Reading (Dressler: 228-231) [The designation "background reading" indicates that the material provides a context for the discussion but will not be reviewed in class.] [You should begin to familiarize yourself with the law library. A good way to begin to do that is to locate the West Virginia Statutes in which the state's criminal code ("Crimes and Their Punishment") is located.] [The West Virginia Code is also available on the web and I recommend that you bookmark the site for future continued use: West Virginia Code: Crimes and Their Punishment People v. Eulo

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