plea-bargain

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See also: plea bargain

English

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Alternative forms

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Noun

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plea-bargain (plural plea-bargains)

  1. (US, law) Alternative form of plea bargain (an agreement between a defendant and the prosecution in which the defendant agrees to a plea such as guilty or nolo contendere to a lesser charge rather than contesting a greater charge).

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Verb

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plea-bargain (third-person singular simple present plea-bargains, present participle plea-bargaining, simple past and past participle plea-bargained)

  1. (US, law) To make an agreement in which a defendant agrees to plead guilty to a lesser charge instead of not guilty to a greater one.
    • 1979 April 28, Tom Reeves, “Revere Sex Cases Resolved”, in Gay Community News, page 1:
      [] former District Attorney, Butters said " [] I think the fact that so many plead guilty proves that these cases should have been prosecuted." One of those who plea-bargained disagrees. Ed Mede last week pleaded guilty to one count of sex with a minor under 16. "This does not prove my gilt [sic]," he insists. "It proves the injustice of the whole system. I could not go on paying for my attorney through a long trial. [] I did not want to face life in prison because of the whim of a biased judge or juror."

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