Information for "Wrongful Accusation Insurance"

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Display titleWrongful Accusation Insurance
Default sort keyWrongful Accusation Insurance
Page length (in bytes)35,436
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Page ID161382
Page content languageen - English
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Page creatorm>Import Bot
Date of page creation21:27, 1 November 2013
Latest editorCliffc999 (talk | contribs)
Date of latest edit16:48, 5 August 2018
Total number of edits15
Recent number of edits (within past 180 days)0
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In detective stories and thrillers, sometimes a framed man fights to prove his innocence—usually of murder—and in doing so commits a series of smaller crimes, yet does not pay for them at the end. Crimes that are often committed in the pursuit of the proof of innocence include resisting arrest, assaulting a police officer, grand theft auto, breaking and entering, reckless endangerment, assault and fraud. The immunity to consequences for those acts is a specific form of Hero Insurance, perhaps granted because they are perceived as acting under compulsion, like a twisted version of a Boxed Crook. In many cases, the transgressions they commit are also comparatively minor (property damage against the bad guy, petty or returnable in same condition theft, perhaps an assault that doesn't result in lasting injury) when compared to the crime they have been wrongly accused of, thus allowing the audience to overlook them and maintain sympathy with the character; when the crime isn't, however, then good luck keeping them on the hero's side.
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