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Terroristic threats
2C:12-3
Terroristic threats.
a. A person
is guilty of a crime of the third degree if he threatens to commit any
crime of violence with the purpose to terrorize another or to cause
evacuation of a building, place of assembly, or facility of public
transportation, or otherwise to cause serious public inconvenience, or
in reckless disregard of the risk of causing such terror or
inconvenience. A violation of this subsection is a crime of the second
degree if it occurs during a declared period of national, State or
county emergency. The actor shall be strictly liable upon proof
that the crime occurred, in fact, during a declared period of
national, State or county emergency. It shall not be a defense
that the actor did not know that there was a declared period of
emergency at the time the crime occurred.
b. A person
is guilty of a crime of the third degree if he threatens to kill
another with the purpose to put him in imminent fear of death under
circumstances reasonably causing the victim to believe the immediacy
of the threat and the likelihood that it will be carried out.
Amended 1981, c.290, s.15; 2002, c.26,
s.11.

Certified by the Supreme Court of New Jersey
as a Criminal Trial Attorney
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