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Understanding Incrimination: Definition, Examples, and Legal Significance

To incriminate someone means to provide evidence or information that could lead to their criminal conviction. It can also refer to the act of accusing or implicating someone in a crime.

For example, if a witness comes forward and provides information that links a suspect to a crime, they may be said to have incriminated the suspect. Similarly, if a person is caught in the act of committing a crime and their actions are recorded on video, they may be said to have incriminated themselves.

Incrimination can be used as a legal term to describe the process of gathering evidence against someone who is suspected of committing a crime. It is often used interchangeably with the term "accusation," but while accusation refers to the act of making an accusation, incrimination refers specifically to the evidence that supports the accusation.

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