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Deceiver - Law Dictionary Search Results

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Forgery

mentioned in the Act, 'the counterfeiting of a seal or die,' and forgery 'with intent to defraud or deceive 'is made punishable as therein provided. A document is 'false' if 'the whole or any material part thereof

Falsification

Documents.--Making any material altera-tion in any official document or in any copy thereof, with intent to defraud or deceive, is felony punishable by penal servitude up to seven years by s. 3(3) of the (English) Forgery Act,

Deceptive resemblance

Deceptive resemblance, there will be deceptive resemblance of a Trade Mark if a trade mark is likely to deceive or cause confusion by its resemblance to another already on the Register of Trade Marks if it is

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Deceit

Deceit [fr. deceptio, Lat.], fraud, cheat, craft, or collusion used to deceive and defraud another. In an action of deceit the plaintiff must prove that the defendant has made a

diversionary

likely or designed to confuse or deceive of tactics

illusory

illusory : likely to mislead or deceive : false deceptive [an plea bargain leading to a longer sentence than expected]

Disguise

the guise or appearance of especially to conceal by an unusual dress or one intended to mislead or deceive

manipulate

so as to serve one's purpose ;specif : to affect (the price of securities) artificially in order to deceive or mislead investors ma·nip·u·la·ble [mə-ni-pyə-lə-bəl] adj ma·nip·u·la·tion [mə-ni-pyə-lā-shən] n ma·nip·u·la·tive [mə-ni-pyə-lā-tiv, -lə-tiv] adj ma·nip·u·la·tive·ly adv ma·nip·u·la·tive·ness n ma·nip·u·la·tor

scienter

al."] 2 : a mental state in fraud (as securities fraud) that is characterized by an intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud

reckless disregard of the truth

Louisiana, 379 U.S. 64 (1964)"] 2 : a reckless lack of attention to the truth that misleads or deceives another (as a magistrate) [whether false statements were made intentionally or in reckless disregard of the truth in

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Deceiver - Law Dictionary Search Results

Research workspace

Save terms and build your research trail

A free trial unlocks notes, tags, search history, and the full AI Studio desk for judgment research.

Forgery

mentioned in the Act, 'the counterfeiting of a seal or die,' and forgery 'with intent to defraud or deceive 'is made punishable as therein provided. A document is 'false' if 'the whole or any material part thereof

Falsification

Documents.--Making any material altera-tion in any official document or in any copy thereof, with intent to defraud or deceive, is felony punishable by penal servitude up to seven years by s. 3(3) of the (English) Forgery Act,

Deceptive resemblance

Deceptive resemblance, there will be deceptive resemblance of a Trade Mark if a trade mark is likely to deceive or cause confusion by its resemblance to another already on the Register of Trade Marks if it is

Keep your definitions linked to case research

Deceit

Deceit [fr. deceptio, Lat.], fraud, cheat, craft, or collusion used to deceive and defraud another. In an action of deceit the plaintiff must prove that the defendant has made a

diversionary

likely or designed to confuse or deceive of tactics

illusory

illusory : likely to mislead or deceive : false deceptive [an plea bargain leading to a longer sentence than expected]

Disguise

the guise or appearance of especially to conceal by an unusual dress or one intended to mislead or deceive

manipulate

so as to serve one's purpose ;specif : to affect (the price of securities) artificially in order to deceive or mislead investors ma·nip·u·la·ble [mə-ni-pyə-lə-bəl] adj ma·nip·u·la·tion [mə-ni-pyə-lā-shən] n ma·nip·u·la·tive [mə-ni-pyə-lā-tiv, -lə-tiv] adj ma·nip·u·la·tive·ly adv ma·nip·u·la·tive·ness n ma·nip·u·la·tor

scienter

al."] 2 : a mental state in fraud (as securities fraud) that is characterized by an intent to deceive, manipulate, or defraud

reckless disregard of the truth

Louisiana, 379 U.S. 64 (1964)"] 2 : a reckless lack of attention to the truth that misleads or deceives another (as a magistrate) [whether false statements were made intentionally or in reckless disregard of the truth in

  • Last »

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