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by stonemetal12 1448 days ago
That is why they are suing rather than pressing charges. When someone steals your car you don't sue them you press charges. When someone doesn't uphold their end of a contract you don't press charges you sue for breach of contract.
2 comments

in reality, you as an individual can't press charges. Only the state can. And many times the state chooses not to. You can sue in civil court, but individuals can't bring cases in criminal court.
You are confusing pressing charges and indictment. Pressing charges just means you accuse somebody of a crime and “press” the prosecutor to indict them. So the state does have the ultimate say on who is prosecuted, but that doesn’t mean you can’t press charges.
Many countries do have the concept of private criminal prosecutions.
"pressing charges" isn't a thing.
As far as I am aware it isn't a specific thing, but a general catchall term for going through the process of filing a criminal complaint, and seeing it through to completion. Maybe there is better words for it but "pressing charges" is what they use on TV so it is top of mind.

In general I meant there is a difference between criminal and civil law, and suing generally refers to civil not criminal law.

It is a thing. In America pressing charges is when you accuse somebody of a crime and ask a prosecutor to bring criminal charges against them.
Prosecutors exclusively decide who is charged. No charges can be "pressed" by a victim.
Yes, in most cases it is the prosecutor's discretion whether to bring a case to a grand jury, but that isn't what pressing charges is. See Merriam Webster's definition[0].

[0] https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/press%20charges