He eventually came to a stop in Chestnut Avenue, and tried to make off on foot, but he was surrounded by officers. |
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The 30-year-old man was caught red-handed by residents as he was about to make off with a stolen motorcycle. |
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A man dressed as Batman during a Children in Need charity fundraiser foiled an attempt by thieves to make off with event proceeds. |
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Anna is a femme fatale looking for a young powerful lover to help her murder her decrepit husband and make off with his fortune. |
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Players are Chicago era mobsters trying to make off with briefcases full of stolen loot. |
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A mew broke into Grace's thoughts, and she blinked down at the small kitten, who was attempting to make off with her fishnets. |
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Police reported a slew of burglaries in which the culprits entered homes while occupants slept, stealing whatever they could make off with. |
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I don't understand why not a few on the right feel the need to defend the sorts of people who make off with millions after failing miserably in their job. |
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They have even dumped garbage from the bins to make off with the garbage bags. |
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First, they make off with digital information about individuals that is useful in many ways. |
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A registration allows you to take action against another party that wants to make off with your product. |
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Now, you would think any ordinary thief would simply take a pair of bolt cutters to the chain and make off with the boat. |
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Do not succumb to the temptation to start a fight, or make off with the contents of the bar in lieu of your money. |
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The thieves make off with everything from expensive electronic goods and tobacco to chocolate and shaving cream. |
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But there's alarm that fraudsters will make off with colossal booty, and City scammers will cream off the rest. |
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You're the senior student of a dwarf named Master Drogan, and one night kobolds attack, poison Drogan, and then make off with some powerful artifacts. |
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However, the quaestor Vexatius Sinusitus is keeping watch: Varius Flavus will not be able to use his talents of trickery and poisoning to make off with the pot. |
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Immediately I said that it was very dangerous, someone was sure to come along, see all those bags and make off with our clothes, documents and so on. |
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There is no incentive for provinces to fully develop their non-renewable natural resources if they realize that the more money they make off natural resources, the more money the government will claw back. |
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Fraudsters pose as legitimate owners of a property, mortgage it to the hilt and make off with the money, leaving the real owners in for a horrifying shock when the lender contacts them to collect on the mortgage. |
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How can this man continue to believe that the best way to fight poverty and unemployment is to continue to make off with the surplus in the employment insurance fund every year? |
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For a while, though, it looked as if the depleted CharrĂșas would make off with the prize, Sebastian El Loco Abreu heading in the 80th goal of the tournament from Maximiliano Pereira's looping cross after half an hour. |
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I leave most of his billfold intact, but make off with a five and a ten. |
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He is the inventor of a tool, the decetralising mandrel, that allows a sculptor to make off centered threads, in fact to get away from the idea of symmetry. |
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It seems the man had clumsily attempted to fake a road accident and make off with Ephreim's body, but the boy was pulled back by his non-albino friends. |
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Because she loved Jason, because she helped him to make off with the Golden Fleece, because she found herself at his side, along and foreign only to be betrayed. |
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Assemble a team to infiltrate the bank and make off with the swag. |
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The race to make off with some live coffee trees or beans was eventually won by the Dutch in 1616, who brought some back to Holland where they were grown in greenhouses. |
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However, many people have some doubts about the security of payments via these Internet shops. Horror stories about Internet pirates who make off with credit card numbers are still doing the rounds. |
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When moving through a tight crowd or at a show, a moment's distraction on your part would be enough for someone to make off with a piece of your camera equipment. |
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