Unlike the absconding narrators who skulk out of sight in most modern novels, James refuses to hide behind the mask of authorial anonymity. |
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The economic offences wing of the Mumbai police is continuing its search for the six absconding directors of Home Trade. |
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He was arrested for absconding and taken to Westlea police station where he was charged with escape. |
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Apparently the first wives of bigamists did not always care to chase down their absconding husbands. |
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However, now, the trio are absconding after cheating people of crores of rupees. |
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We were frightened of absconding because we thought the major might have us court-martialled. |
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Judge Simon Fawcus sentenced him to 18 years for one charge of conspiracy to rob and nine months, to run concurrently, for absconding from bail. |
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In the civilian criminal justice system, provision is made to deal with an absconding accused. |
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It is very unlikely that they present any risk of absconding while trying to obtain their passport, flight ticket and exit permit. |
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Why will the human resources minister not fess up to this scandalous absconding of tax dollars and simply resign? |
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After the London Games, a number of stories surfaced in the media about athletes from other countries absconding from the Olympic village. |
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There is some will that we should be doing legal work for absconding jurisdiction. |
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This is envisaged only if the person poses a threat to public security or in order to prevent the imminent risk of absconding. |
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The proposal envisages that detention can take place where there is a risk of the person absconding and after notification of transfer decisions. |
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Aided by some divine meddling, Paris performs the consummate indignity against his host Menelaus by absconding with his wife. |
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He was given two months' jail for the first breach of the ASBO, two months for the second breach, and two weeks for absconding from bail, all to run consecutively. |
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Following Shakespeare's plot closely, he gives us absconding lovers, local amdram yokels and bands of woodlanders led by the supernatural Sylvia and Angel. |
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In short, the government has met with such unalloyed success selling its hard line to an anxious electorate that it has rarely needed to invoke the spectre of absconding. |
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He vainly tries to protect an absconding teenager from the police. |
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The decline is partly due to a reduction in the number of unaccompanied children from China, who previously comprised a large proportion of absconding children. |
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In the case of those who are convicted and sent back to their home country, as this implies long haul flights with a stop over, there is the risk of them absconding. |
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Because women are less likely to have a regular job or own or rent property in their own name, they may appear by these indicators to be at greater risk of absconding. |
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Temporary custody should only be used if necessary to prevent the risk of absconding and if the application of less coercive measures would not be sufficient. |
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A type of absconding behaviour often studied separately is wandering. |
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The waves seemed to have closed over the Umbar episode, perhaps owing to his own ignoscible treatment of the subject and the absconding rogues. |
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However, managing without the rest is a heavy price for absconding. |
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The proposed addition makes it clear that that simply staying illegally on the territory of a Member State should not of itself be considered compelling proof of a risk of absconding. |
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The International Commission of Jurists suggests that for pre-trial detention such reasons might be a real risk of absconding or the concrete threat of a violent crime. |
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He had been so he said a card-sharp and a safe-cracker, had sold insurance and had run a hockey team, the Butte Bombers, before apparently absconding with the money from their biggest game. |
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As to the aim, Member States should base individual grounds for detention on either the need for an efficient examination of an asylum application or the prevention of absconding by the applicant. |
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If it is going to provide workers with expensive training, it will very likely want to give them permanent jobs as well, if only to discourage them from absconding to competitors. |
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In general, the categories who are detained include those who are at a high risk of absconding, people whose identity is not established and multiple applicants. |
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Avie Howell was shot during a confrontation with local officer in a remote part of the island a day after absconding from Antigua's jail. |
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Of all the reasons behind the over-use of pre-trial detention, the interpretation of the risk of absconding may be the one with the most discriminatory impact on women. |
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Some of these include patient safety issues around seclusion and restraint use, self-harming behaviour and suicide, absconding, and reduced capacity for self-advocacy. |
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Modern technology accompanies the absconding of the original attitude. |
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