no crime

English

Verb

no crime (third-person singular simple present no crimes, present participle no criming, simple past and past participle no crimed)

  1. Alternative form of no-crime.
    • 1989, Susan S. M. Edwards, Policing "domestic" violence: women, the law, and the state, Sage Pubns (→ISBN):
      Even so, in 38 per cent of cases 'no crimed' the victim and aggressor were not residing together.
    • 2004, J. Jordan, The Word of a Woman?: Police, Rape and Belief, Springer (→ISBN), page 63:
      During his study tour of the United States of America, Blair (1985) noted that some police departments had three different categories for the equivalent of cases that were 'no crimed'. These were: 'inactive' (undetected); 'unfounded'; and [...]
    • 2012, Jeanne Gregory, Sue Lees, Policing Sexual Assault, Routledge (→ISBN), page 62:
      [...] very similar pattern of 'no criming' to that found in studies undertaken earlier in the 1980s. Of the cases initially reported as rape, attempted rape or indecent assault during the two year period covered by the study, 38 per cent (116 out of 301) ...
    • 2012, Jeanne Gregory, Sue Lees, Policing Sexual Assault, Routledge (→ISBN), page 96:
      In our study, which included reported rapes 'no crimed' in the first month, clear differences were apparent between the three groups, so that 35 per cent of stranger rapes were 'no crimed', whereas [...]

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