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  1. #1
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    Sep 2006
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    Question Criminal damage to a vehicle

    State Wisconsin: My son was intoxicated, trashed his x girlfriends vehicle, her friends beat him enough to go to hospital. My question: what if any is the differance between destruction of private property and criminal destruction of private prroperty?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
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    Default Re: Criminal damage to a vehicle

    Quote Quoting buddy0343
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    State Wisconsin: My son was intoxicated, trashed his x girlfriends vehicle, her friends beat him enough to go to hospital. My question: what if any is the differance between destruction of private property and criminal destruction of private prroperty?
    Sometimes destruction of private property happens accidently. What makes his actions criminal is the fact that he did it intentionally.

    From Wisconsin statutes:

    943.01 Damage to property.

    (1) Whoever intentionally causes damage to any physical property of another without the person’s consent is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.

    (2) Any person violating sub. (1) under any of the following circumstances is guilty of a Class I felony:

    (a) 1. In this paragraph, “highway” means any public way or thoroughfare, including bridges thereon, any roadways commonly used for vehicular traffic, whether public or private, any railroad, including street and interurban railways, and any navigable waterway or airport.

    2. The property damaged is a vehicle or highway and the damage is of a kind which is likely to cause injury to a person or further property damage.

    (b) The property damaged belongs to a public utility or common carrier and the damage is of a kind which is likely to impair the services of the public utility or common carrier.

    (c) The property damaged belongs to a person who is or was a grand or petit juror and the damage was caused by reason of any verdict or indictment assented to by the owner.

    (d) If the total property damaged in violation of sub. (1) is reduced in value by more than $2,500. For the purposes of this paragraph, property is reduced in value by the amount which it would cost either to repair or replace it, whichever is less.

    (e) The property damaged is on state−owned land and is listed on the registry under sub. (5).

    (f) 1. In this paragraph, “rock art site” means an archaeological site that contains paintings, carvings or other deliberate modifications of an immobile rock surface, such as a cave, overhang, boulder or bluff face, to produce symbols, stories, messages, designs or pictures. “Rock art site” includes artifacts and other cultural items, modified soils, bone and other objects of archaeological interest that are located adjacent to the paintings, carvings or other deliberate rock surface modifications.

    2. The property damaged is a rock art site, any portion of a rock art site or any object that is part of a rock art site, if the rock art site is listed on the national register of historic places in Wisconsin, as defined in s. 44.31 (5), or the state register of historic places under s. 44.36.

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