Frequently asked questions about identification of illegal behavior and responsibility attribution
1. Is illegal behavior necessarily a dishonest behavior?1. For illegal acts, if the offender has subjective faults, such as breaking the law intentionally or due to poor consideration, it also constitutes a breach of trust. Intentional violation of the law subjectively constitutes malicious dishonesty, and subjective negligence in violation of the law constitutes general dishonesty.
2. For illegal acts, if the offender violates the law due to force majeure or has other legitimate reasons, or actively remedies the violation after the violation or obtains the understanding of the other party, it does not constitute a breach of trust.
3. The identification of untrustworthy behavior requires both objective and subjective elements. The objective element means that an act has damaged the legitimate rights and interests of others; the subjective element means that the perpetrator is at fault subjectively. , or: Injury to others through negligence such as inconsiderateness, overconfidence, recklessness and negligence. The identification of illegal acts only needs to meet the objective requirements, that is: whether there are illegal facts.
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