English edit

Etymology edit

non- +‎ aggravated

Adjective edit

nonaggravated (not comparable)

  1. (criminology) Not aggravated; not including factors such as violence, deadly weapons, drugs, including additional offenses, etc. that make the criminal offense more heinous or offensive.
    • 1997, West's South Eastern Reporter, page 680:
      In making this determination, we look to the evidence pertaining only to the element of aggravated robbery that distinguishes it from nonaggravated robbery.
    • 2010, Leslie Francis, Date Rape: Feminism, Philosophy, and the Law, page 120:
      Making nonaggravated sexual assault a strict liability crime means, in effect, that even if it would be completely impossible and unreasonable for the man to believe that the woman was engaging in the sexual act against her will (or, perhaps, that she thought the sex was insufficiently "communicative"), he would still be convicted.
    • 2019, Kathleen Nadeau, ‎ Sangita Rayamajhi, Women and Violence: Global Lives in Focus, page 76:
      However, repeated nonaggravated assault against a family member was considered a criminal offense and punishable by up to 360 hours of community service, a maximum of one year of forced labor, or a maximum of two years in prison.