Crimes do not always equal torts. You punch me. You have committed a criminal assault and a civil battery. I can sue you for battery. The state can try you for assault.
If a crime has been committed it would be done criminally. If you're suing someone for battery, since battery is a crime, it's a criminal case. Both of those you just iterated here.. one case, criminal.
I punch you because you're black. You can sue me for battery. The state can try me for a hate crime - the underlying crime for the hate crime is still assault. The 'hate' is merely a modifier.
Suing for battery, criminal. Hate modifiers, still criminal.. same case.
Hate crimes are criminal offenses. They aren't torts. You can't sue for them. You can sue for the underlying assault, which I've said in every post. Evidence that you were previously convicted of a hate-inspired assault against me boosts your case.
The criminal case handles the issue of crime, not damages. Someone can very well still be sued in civil court for damages with or without a criminal case against them. There's no bigger proof of this than the OJ Simpson case. He went through a criminal case to establish criminal liability for killing two people. He was found not guilty. He was still sued after the fact in civil court for civil liability in damages, not the crime itself, and was in fact liable, or for more layman terms, guilt. The burden of proof was not met and reasonable doubt existed enough to call him guilty in a criminal case, in a civil case it was enough proof that he was liable for damages. Apples, oranges.
That's my last attempt to point out that someone can in fact be sued for an act of the same thing in a civil court for liability in damages even if they get tried in a criminal case, but in a different scope since criminal cases are not the same as civil, which obviously was pointed out but not understood very well. Hope people get it at this point, otherwise, you're on your own.
