For most, imprisonment at home would equate to unspeakable living conditions, physical torture, and false confessions extorted by threats. |
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The Crown in that case submitted that the confessions were rightly admitted and that the convictions were safe and satisfactory. |
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For all the upbeat luster of their imagery and rhymes, his poems are often confessions of loneriness and distress. |
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The forms and the photographs are there on exhibit, along with the confessions written in longhand and in great detail. |
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Or maybe he would prefer something along the lines of suicidal confessions of a mind bordering on death and raving lunacy. |
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The judge also held that the authenticity of the confessions would be decided at the time of trial. |
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My confessions are talcing my hair, shopping in Primark and talking to the cat in a baby voice. |
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Warne clearly broke the rules, and in terms of his confessions has been clearly acting in bad faith. |
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His confessions of guilt are merely a thin cover for re-emergent desires within the German ruling class. |
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The insurgency has led police to abuse detainees, using torture as punishment or to extract confessions, the report said. |
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Its officers wrote out false confessions and used torture to force suspects to sign them. |
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In a characteristic gesture, he made a tape of their confessions and had it distributed as a warning to others who might betray the organization. |
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If I could play my cards right, I may just get a twofer, two confessions at once. |
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Words must be spoken, confessions must told, for time was slowly slipping away. |
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The epic Muse that firmly guarded his poetic talent from lyrical confessions inspires the prominent narrativity of this cycle as well. |
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It is very obvious if confessions were exerted under torture, then they are null and void. |
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Creeds and confessions are important, but they are subordinate to the Word and must be judged by the Word. |
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The appellant's whole case on the confessions to the police officers was that he was highly suggestible. |
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They later claimed that their patently false confessions had been extracted by torture. |
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In future, his feelings would be kept closely buttoned up, and personal confessions avoided. |
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Pressing, also known as peine forte et dure, was both a death sentence and a means of drawing out confessions. |
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Public confessions were made, and penitents touched a wampum belt as a pledge of reform. |
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The virtual disappearance of the traditional hearing of confessions in the box has led to the penitential services being the alternative way. |
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Those detained face beatings and other forms of torture, aimed at coercing confessions or information about rebel forces. |
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This parish only attracted three converts last year and confessions are fearfully low. |
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Treating terrorism like organised crime, investigators used informants, turncoat terrorists, telephone bugs and confessions to build the case. |
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I get more confessions from con artists than from any other kind of criminal. |
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The court continued to admit the confessions of the three as evidence, in spite the fact that they allegedly were extracted using torture. |
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This week has been a series of revelations and confessions for me, which is unusual. |
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The only eyebrow-raising moments come from confessions of infantile sexuality that would have had Freud scrambling for pad and pen. |
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What priest hearing confessions and offering the comfort of God's forgiveness is exempt from the call to Christlike humility? |
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And so you had all these confessions going on, kids were going to confession all over the place. |
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And that's probably enough albums, links, and weird personal confessions to make a point of some sort, so I'll stop there. |
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The confessions of a quantum mechanic may not strike us as potentially exciting, but his private life was as complex as his theoretical one. |
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The Bradford pop idol had previously denied a liaison with the topless model, despite her own confessions to tabloid newspapers. |
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We would probably not today know of police coercion, brutality, forced confessions and rigged trials. |
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They have been subjected to the most degrading treatment and have been tortured to extract confessions from them. |
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It instead violates a prophylactic rule intended to help discipline police and deter coerced confessions. |
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Why evangelicals should object to confessions of faith I am at a loss to understand. |
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As juvenile crime rises, here and across the country, tonight's confessions of a York teenager make provocative reading. |
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Excerpts of his video statements fill the highlight reels when unreliable confessions are the subject of TV programs. |
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Certainly his confessions might still be reliable, along with the confessions of Abu Zubaydah and other confederates being interrogated in secret. |
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As regards the accused, it is a matter of court record that the confessions that prosecutors continue to seek to use against them were allegedly extracted using torture. |
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Your point is that if the confessions were held by this Court to have been wrongly admitted, there would be too little evidence to justify a further trial. |
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Judges rarely render even highly suspicious confessions inadmissible, and juries often convict confessors, even in the absence of physical evidence. |
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Like a verbal snake charmer, he could swoon them into missteps, even confessions. |
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The lengthy detention of scores of people without trial as well as hundreds of cases of torture and forced confessions on sedition charges could also be investigated. |
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If midwives jump in and act on confessions, pregnant women are likely to clam up, become reticent about confiding in them or even leave antenatal care. |
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So the priest hears confessions and restores the penitent, not only to fellowship with God, but to fellowship with the injured Body, by the grace of God. |
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All the witnesses could offer were thirdhand accounts or deathbed confessions that came decades after the fact. |
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The prosecution admitted that confessions had been abstracted by threatened execution, false witnesses, and mock trials, but all the defendants were found guilty. |
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We have the crime of the century, willing defendants, mountains of evidence, uncoerced confessions. |
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These types of confessions make Act 2 feel overlong and labored at times. |
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The actors took a short while to fully get into the difficult dialogue, but by the end, the confessions, revelations and delusions were brilliantly spelt out. |
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Baptists from the first have issued their confessions of faith. |
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Now, it can be done in ways that comport with the law, or it can be done in ways that are very dangerous and capable of producing false confessions. |
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This I believe to be the only possible literature of the free future, uninterrupted and unrevised full confessions about what actually happened in real life. |
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These are some of the most unsparingly candid confessions about the sheer slog and awkwardness and grinding disappointment of designing ever committed to print. |
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He has no time for stuttering confessions or intimate revelations. |
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Stepping out from under the umbrella: confessions of a pluviophile. |
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The priest would hear confessions and give absolution for sins. |
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Testimony was what made the case, chiefly the confessions of the young men. |
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No doubt, there are wrongful convictions that result from misidentification and coerced confessions. |
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The police eventually obtained two written confessions that the brothers would describe as coerced. |
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In confessions of an Ivy League Frat Boy, the self-induced, self-absorbed Greek tragedy of Andrew Lohse. |
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The testimony included that of two defendants, Salaam and Wise, who took the stand to repudiate their confessions. |
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He used it as a remote eavesdropping device, tucked beneath beds and hidden in laundry hampers, capturing closed-door confessions and seizing suburban secrets. |
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What's new, then, is the pairing of unhappy truths with sweet kisses and saccharine confessions. |
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Ataman uses film to explore the notion of true confessions and reportage. |
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In the 1980s he confessed to hundreds of killings but later retracted these confessions and his death sentence was recently commuted to life imprisonment. |
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Once people with ID are arrested, they are particularly susceptible to making coerced and often false confessions. |
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He maintains a list of people with ID whom he believes were unjustly convicted after false confessions. |
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In case there is, I hereby volunteer to preside over confessions. |
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This means that the bases for church reunion have to be the confessions of faith and the communal structures of the once undivided church of East and West. |
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Although often this is considered proof positive of guilt at trial, it is not an uncommon occurrence in false confessions. |
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Anabaptists required that baptismal candidates be able to make their own confessions of faith and so rejected baptism of infants. |
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Men may not too rashly believe the confessions of witches, nor yet the evidence against them. |
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That means no blurted-out confessions, as well as no more hen nights with your mum-in-law. |
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Psalm 51, the most familiar of all psalmic confessions, does not grovel in guilt. |
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None of this, however, is what makes confessions so outrageous. |
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Crammed with gossip, anecdotes, and confessions..., his garrulous, untidy narratives read like a good novel. |
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Adventist, Baptist, Methodist, Pentecostal and other Protestant confessions arose in the following centuries. |
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The argument primarily drew on accounts of Richard's behaviour, as well as of his confessions and penitences, and of his childless marriage. |
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The clergy were on the front line of the disease, bringing comfort to the dying, hearing final confessions and organising burials. |
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Following the Ridolfi plot of 1571 prisoners were made to dictate their confessions, before copying and signing them, if they still could. |
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Fawkes's and Tresham's testimony regarding the Spanish treason was read aloud, as well as confessions related specifically to the Gunpowder Plot. |
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Other faiths existed in the state, but never achieved a demographic significance and cultural impact of these three confessions. |
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I was in mortal fear lest the captain should repent of his confessions and make an end of me. |
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It is this community understanding of theology that is expressed in confessions. |
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As declared in the Westminster and Second Helvetic confessions, the core doctrines are predestination and election. |
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There was more attention to historic creeds such as the Augsburg, the Heidelberg, and the Westminster confessions. |
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Redlich noted that this is another common thread in false confessions. |
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The singer, who is expecting her first baby with rugby player boyfriend Gavin Henson, made the confessions on a vidcast on her website. |
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He also produced several confessions of faith in order to unite the churches. |
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Quoting the text liberally, she looks at the construction of the confessions, shamanistic perspectives, and the demonological elements. |
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His legacy lives on in the confessions, liturgy, and church orders of the Reformed churches of today. |
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Not only do many pentiti fabricate their confessions,but they also take advantage of their newly earned freedom to start mafia groups. |
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Although his name is not widely recognised, Zwingli's legacy lives on in the basic confessions of the Reformed churches of today. |
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Likewise, the earliest Baptist confessions were written before Arminianism itself was a full-fledged theological system. |
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For one thing, the Campbellites disfavored the Baptist's confessions and missionary alliances, both of which they thought were unwarranted by Scripture. |
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Toward the middle of the 16th century, the Reformed began to commit their beliefs to confessions of faith, which would shape the future definition of the Reformed faith. |
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Featuring shocking, surprising and candid confessions, everyday law enforcers, teachers, GPs and secretaries spill the beans on their working lives. |
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This aligns with Luther's preference and the Lutheran confessions. |
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The mysterious strings of words and numbers hint at inner monologues, whispered confessions, overheard snatches of conversation, and free floating streams of consciousness. |
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In 1662, before reputable witnesses, Gowdie gave a series of confessions to witchcraft that emerged into public awareness only two centuries later. |
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The clergy in turn used the confessions as material to sermonize against, which had the paradoxical effect of advertising the very ideas they supposedly wanted to eradicate. |
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Parish priests commonly function as spiritual guides, but such guides can be any person, male or female, who has been given a blessing to hear confessions. |
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Those two constituted the only officially recognized Protestant denominations, while various other Protestant confessions such as Anabaptism, Arminianism, etc. |
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