User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
soliciting- present participle of solicit
Extensive Definition
In the United
States, solicitation is a crime; it is an inchoate
offense that consists of a person offering money or something
else of value in order to incite or induce another to commit a
crime with the specific
intent that the person solicited commit the crime. The term
'solicitation' always implies some sort of commercial element
(payment). Local ordinances that forbid solicitation may prevent
door-to-door sales, but they cannot exclude Jehovah's Witnesses,
political candidates or others who advocate a position, but do not
offer or request money. In the other common law
countries, the situation is different:
- where the substantive offense is not committed, the charges are drawn from incitement, conspiracy, and attempt;
- where the substantive offense is committed, the charges are drawn from conspiracy, counseling and procuring (see accessories), and the substantive offenses as joint principals (see common purpose).
In England
and Wales, the term soliciting alone refers to "loitering or
soliciting in a public place for the purpose of
prostitution" under the Street
Offences Act 1959http://www.statutelaw.gov.uk/legResults.aspx?LegType=All+Legislation&title=street+offences+act+&searchEnacted=0&extentMatchOnly=0&confersPower=0&blanketAmendment=0&TYPE=QS&NavFrom=0&activeTextDocId=1127916&PageNumber=1&SortAlpha=0.
For the latest Home Office proposals on this offence, see
http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/documents/cons-paying-the-price/Paying-the-Price-RIA.pdf.
It is not necessary that the person actually
commit the crime, nor is it necessary that the person solicited be
willing or able to commit the crime (such as if the "solicitee"
were an undercover
police
officer).
For example, if Alice commands Bob to assault Charlie and Alice
intends for Bob to assault Charlie, then Alice is guilty of
solicitation. However, if Alice commands Bob to assault Charlie
without intending that an actual crime be committed (perhaps
believing that Charlie has given consent), then there is no
solicitation.
An interesting twist on solicitation occurs when
a third party that the solicitor did not intend to receive the
incitement overhears the request to the original solicitee and
unbeknownst to the solicitor, commits the target offense. In a
minority of jurisdictions in the United States, this situation
would still be considered solicitation even though the defendant
never intended the person that committed the crime to have done
so.
Solicitation is also subject to the
doctrine of merger, which applies in situations where the
person solicited actually commits the crime. In such a situation,
both Alice and Bob could be charged with the crime as accomplices,
which would preclude conviction under solicitation; a person cannot
be punished for both solicitation and the crime solicited.
Note that solicitation can apply to just about
any criminal act. There are also many statutes for specific
solicitation crimes. For example, solicitation of murder is often considered a
capital
offense, and has its own statute. Other examples might be
solicitation of prostitution, or
solicitation of a bribe.
See also
soliciting in Czech: Solicitace
soliciting in German: Anstiftung
soliciting in Hebrew: הסתה