Civil infraction

In common law countries, a civil infraction is a non-criminal violation of a rule, ordinance, or regulation.[1]

United States law

A civil infraction is a violation of the law less serious than a misdemeanor,[2] and which usually does not attach certain individual rights such as a jury trial.

Punishments for infractions

In the United States, the key characteristic of an infraction is that the punishment seldom includes any amount of incarceration in a prison or jail or any other loss of civil rights  typically the only punishment is a fine, although sometimes other regulatory actions are possible (e.g. revocation of a license or permit) or an order to remedy or mitigate the situation.

gollark: *?
gollark: How about calculating the hash rate of the number 5, or the colour blue/
gollark: How do you calculate the hash rate of watts per hour?
gollark: To be precise, 5Wu/cm^-3 (5 watt-uselessnesses per centimeter^-3)
gollark: Well, it sort of is, but a useless and nonsensical one.

References

3. https://mjieducation.mi.gov/documents/resources-for-trial-court-staff/178-holt-rev-2015/file

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