thumb|Arraignment at the Ministries trial|Ministries Trial, 20 December 1947 Arraignment is a formal reading of a criminal charging document in the presence of the defendant, to inform them of the criminal charges against them. In response to arraignment, in some jurisdictions, the accused is expected to enter a plea; in other jurisdictions, no plea is required. Acceptable pleas vary among jurisdictions, but they generally include guilty, not guilty, and the peremptory pleas (pleas in bar) setting out reasons why a trial cannot proceed. Pleas of nolo contendere ('no contest') and the Alford pl
公訴事実(こうそじじつ)とは、一度の訴訟において、起訴状に訴因として明示して記載しなければならない、犯罪事実のことである。
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).