Crime in a sentence as a noun

And some nations cut prison sentence, and crime went down.

It's what you buy with BTC, or any other currency, that is the crime.

Some nations increased prison sentences to try and deter crime, and crime went down.

Oh, and since when does selling BTC anywhere, including Silk Road, constitute a crime?

Some nations put a huge effort into reforming criminals, and crime went down.

There isn't any large crime related to South American cocoa or coffee imports.

How much scapegoating happens even today around immigrants and crime, jobs, culture, etc.?

I what some people here seemed to be missing, is this correlation isn't just lead was removed from the environment and 23 years later crime went down.

People are upset because of this new standard of "grab everything, put it in a 'secure' location and mine it in the future for past crimes.

Instead, they've pledged to give half to some of their favorite charities, and some of you are acting as if it's a crime against humanity.

But seductive dystopias are dangerous because they can catch on. Who wouldn't want low crime, clean streets, and a wonderfully healthy economy?

It blew my mind that in a case that they had in the bag and where the evidence of the crime itself was enough to put him away forever they still did all of that.

Why should science fair projects be treated any differently than crime, the personal lives of celebrities, politics, or economics?

[1]This is a great example of why we should treat terrorism like any other crime, and why the police should never be trusted with exceptional powers simply because we feel under threat.

I was there essentially through misplaced intellectual curiosity, while others were there because their lives were so bad out of jail that crime was actually a rational survival choice.

Crime definitions

noun

(criminal law) an act punishable by law; usually considered an evil act; "a long record of crimes"

See also: offense offence law-breaking

noun

an evil act not necessarily punishable by law; "crimes of the heart"