Where once convicts were forced to hop around the exercise yard in the blazing sun, they now sunbathe in deckchairs, waited on by the guards. |
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Something had to be done about the state of crime, the numbers of transportable convicts not yet transported. |
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The people who ran the men's home would bargain with judges to get convicts who were drug addicts out of the jails and into the home. |
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The majority of the county convicts placed in state custody were put to work on prison farms rather than on road gangs. |
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The number of convicts used in road gangs in Alabama increased rapidly in the late 1940s as demobilization increased the population of young men. |
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He had marked himself out as a man with dangerously liberal ideas, a supporter of convicts and emancipists. |
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For a long time in Australia, probably the main industry was the transportation of convicts from the United Kingdom. |
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Those who were less keen to compete for migrants could resort to convicts as casual labour. |
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It also signifies fugitives and runaways, including known criminals who are at large such as escaped convicts. |
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Part of the Commission's duty was to advise the Governor on the desirability of releasing convicts or commuting their sentence. |
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With the advent of bridewells, convicts begin to inhabit separate punitive institutions for the first time. |
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Many British navy and army officers hated the 'flash language' used by convicts. |
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Rwanda's prisons and lock-ups house close to 112,000 genocide suspects and another 5,000 convicts. |
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At night the convicts either slept in their seats or, if they were lucky, bunked down at a county jail en route. |
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In days of old, High Sheriffs had the authority to raise an army and even order executions of convicts. |
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The ticket of leave was initially a device to reduce the number of convicts on the store. |
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Aborigines sometimes killed straying convicts, but officialdom usually assumed they had offended in some way. |
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Experienced, hardened convicts would plan for this by taking newcomers with them. |
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This World War II romance film makes Amanda feel all warm and cozy, as only stories of convicts and shell-shocked veterans can. |
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This was achieved by means of barges which came alongside to transport convicts across the half mile of water to a small jetty. |
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The rulers of the British Empire fell for the sweet talk and sent the first shipload of British convicts to the Cape. |
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There is a large prison on the moor, where more than a thousand convicts are confined. |
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Of the 187 whites killed, the majority were convicts working as shepherds and stockmen on isolated properties in remote locations. |
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Edith looked at me as if I was one of the runaway convicts of some county jail. |
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They will endorse co-workers who are convicts, misanthropes and sociopaths, whatever, all in the name of unity. |
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Joker Jackson and Noah Cullen are two convicts chained together in the back of a truck heading for work on a chain gang. |
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This former farming outstation at Koonya, near Port Arthur, housed convicts in the 1850s, and has its own museum and restored buildings. |
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Hughes's central concern was to display the suffering of the convicts and the viciousness of their gaolers. |
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In general, convicts can file for clemency as many times as they want, but they have to wait a year or two between applications. |
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He was one of the 11 other convicts at the penitentiary who were so treated. |
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In Kingston, we check out the museum at the penitentiary, where convicts have been housed for well over 100 years. |
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It is tempting for trendy writers to portray him as a tool of rich imperialists oppressing the poor convicts. |
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The play still shocks with the pettiness of the offences that have brought the convicts to the flogger or the hangman. |
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As of October 2002, there were 83 convicts on death row for crimes committed as minors. |
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The early squatters relied on convicts and emancipists to provide the labour on their stations. |
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Languishing in jail for the last year and a half, she is said to be sharing space in the jail with drug convicts and other criminals. |
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As of 2001, drug convicts accounted for 57 percent of the federal inmate population. |
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And some states are better at rehabilitating the prisoners and convicts behind the bars. |
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Common sense and usual business practice prevailed along with generalised desires to rid the kingdom of unwanted transportable convicts. |
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He also started writing his own fiction, which focused primarily on convicts and prison life. |
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Suspended death sentences in China often are commuted to life in prison if the convicts are deemed reformed. |
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Two convicts escape while handcuffed together, and are pursued by police and the press while attempting to track down their former associates. |
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This middle-class morality also defined female convicts ' experiences of prison life. |
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He was buried two days later in unconsecrated ground reserved for convicts, paupers and suicides in an unmarked grave in the cemetery at Toodyay. |
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No ploughs were allowed, with the idea of making the prisoners' work laborious, so the convicts responded with the government stroke. |
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He was popular with the emancipists and had no difficulty with his assigned convicts. |
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The cast members are illiterate, dispirited convicts with a leading lady who is about to be hanged. |
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When Governor Phillip brought the first group of convicts to Sydney in 1788, he took down some words in the local language, Dharuk. |
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Reporters hung about the docks, waiting for released convicts to land. |
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With the help of a few survivors and the military junk pile at their disposal, they have to take on a prison full of convicts who now run the place. |
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Its late-nineteenth-century exponents celebrated the convicts, diggers, and bush workers as bearers of a tradition of egalitarian, masculine solidarity. |
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Should they manage to escape, they are to be pursued as dangerous fugitives and charged in the same way as convicts who break out of high security jails. |
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This was especially so in a penal colony where many of the convicts were hardened criminals and many of the free settlers were themselves ex-convicts and impulsive men. |
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The change of status would also mean that Tommy has to be transferred from a detention cell to a prison room, which he has to share with other convicts. |
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But this view of our history did not take root, and now the usual opinion on Bent is that he was a factious opponent of the good governor who stood up for convicts. |
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Many times convicts have escaped while under a warder, not because the officer is negligent but simply that he is looking after too many inmates than he ought to. |
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One day when Chris was at work and the kids were at school, two convicts who had escaped from jail broke into the Rodgers home in an attempt to hide from the police. |
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The present plan would remove from that prison a large portion of the transportable convicts who ought to be supported by the public and not by the city. |
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When a messy drunk-driving incident lands him in jail, he is assigned the task of assembling a team of convicts to play in a big football game against sadistic guards. |
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Even the furloughed convicts who boil down pine trees into turpentine in my vast forest have been receiving an extra pullet or two in their monthly rations. |
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His months spent researching prison life gave him greater empathy towards convicts. |
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There were some blue acaras and some convicts as well as some livebearers. |
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It was then British policy to transport convicts in officially naval vessels, although the Calcutta was a big converted East Indiaman with 500 people aboard. |
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It also takes in underage convicts receiving reformatory education. |
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Estrada's move to soften his stand on capital punishment followed his announcement that he has commuted death sentences to life terms for over 100 convicts. |
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In 1796 the corpse of convicted murderer Francis Morgan was hung in chains from a gibbet as a sign to arriving convicts of their fate for bad behaviour. |
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The sergeant has come instead for a blacksmith who can promptly mend the broken cuffs so that they can be put to use this afternoon in the hunt for two escaped convicts. |
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Then came the bullfights, except that the toreadors, being slaves or convicts, had been given no chance to practice, so the bull usually gored them to death. |
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I am satisfied that there are many convicts in this prison unprovenly or unjustly confined, and that should have relief. |
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Less esteemed was her attempt to drive all snakes from the Apple Isle by paying convicts a shilling for each reptilian head brought to her. |
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Since the days of Dreyfus, interest in Guiana and the plight of its jungle-bound, fever-ridden convicts has never diminished. |
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Her Majesty's Prison Service, reporting to the Ministry of Justice, manages most prisons, housing over 85,000 convicts. |
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The government adopted the basics of Matra's plan in 1784, and funded the settlement of convicts. |
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In 1787 the First Fleet set sail, carrying the first shipment of convicts to the colony. |
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The royal graves and many others were probably rediscovered by chance in 1788 when a prison was being constructed by convicts on the site. |
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Seventeen convicts are awaiting transfer to continue serving their sentences in their homeland. |
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During the 18th and 19th centuries, 300,000 free emigrants and 45,000 convicts left Ireland to settle in Australia. |
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Some crews were made up of professional merchant seamen, others of pirates, debtors, and convicts. |
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Since most of these nations did not have a prison system, convicts were often sold or used in the scattered local domestic slave market. |
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Gladiators were trained combatants who might be slaves, convicts, or free volunteers. |
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By contrast, noxii were convicts sentenced to the arena with little or no training, often unarmed, and with no expectation of survival. |
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Until 2017 there was no provision for convicts in northern Wales, with prisoners sent to prisons in Liverpool and further afield. |
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A considerable number of Irish convicts were sentenced to transportation for 'treason' while fighting for Irish independence from British rule. |
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This system allowed private contractors to purchase the services of convicts from the state or local governments for a specific time period. |
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Despite this a number of Europeans, including convicts, formed favourable impressions of Aboriginal life through living with Aboriginal Groups. |
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A centre for juvenile convicts, Henry Gurney Prisoners School, is in Telok Mas, Malacca. |
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The war galleys were mostly manned by prisoners of war or convicts, who were chained to benches, usually three to six per oar. |
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Following the suspension of transportation to New South Wales, all transported convicts were sent to Van Diemen's Land. |
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Male convicts served their sentences as assigned labour to free settlers or in gangs assigned to public works. |
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While the ship was becalmed in Recherche Bay, convicts allowed on deck attacked their guards and took control of the brig. |
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The mutineers marooned officers, soldiers, and convicts who did not join the mutiny without supplies. |
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The convicts then sailed the Cyprus to Canton, China, where they scuttled her and claimed to be castaways from another vessel. |
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Bowen, who led a party of 49, including 21 male and three female convicts, named the camp Risdon. |
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For special reasons, the use of convicts as public servants warrants separate attention. |
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In 1844, the ringleaders were caught and transported to Australia as convicts. |
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From European settlement in 1788, child convicts were occasionally sent to Australia where they were made to work. |
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France transported convicts to Devil's Island and New Caledonia, but their usage both started and ended at later times. |
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This enabled some convicts to resume a more normal life, to marry and raise a family, and to contribute to the development of the colony. |
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There was also the hope that transported convicts could be rehabilitated and reformed by starting a new life in the colonies. |
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They obtained a contract from the sheriffs, and after the voyage to the colonies they sold the convicts as indentured servants. |
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During the 80 years of its use to Australia, the number of transported convicts totaled about 162,000 men and women. |
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In the 17th century transportation was carried out at the expense of the convicts or the shipowners. |
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The Transportation Act 1717 allowed courts to sentence convicts to seven years' transportation to America. |
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In 1720, an extension authorised payments by the Crown to merchants contracted to take the convicts to America. |
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Steel and its subsidiaries was highly dependent in the South on the labor of black workers and convicts. |
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According to an opinion piece in The Hindu, the government seems to be totally indifferent to the pathetic plight of convicts. |
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But, in reality, it is God the Holy Spirit who convicts us of our deep need of redemption and renewal. |
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Banished BBC2, 9pm Drama about the British convicts and soldiers of a penal colony in Australia in the 18th century. |
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I thought there was ether a drug raid, escaped convicts, or perish the thought. |
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Scots convicts are enjoying access to smuggled mobile phones, personal stereos, drugs, home-made hooch and weapons. |
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But by the late 1920s, after the introduct ion of parole, forms of early release in Georgia affected over 1000 convicts a year, more than a sixth of the convict population. |
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According to details, death row convicts Ghulam Musa and Aftab Masih had killed a woman and her two sons Amir and Atir in 1992 during a robbery attempt. |
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Around that time many prospectors known as Vandemonians who had served time as convicts took to the mines and staked their ground for the promise of riches. |
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Windows were smashed and fires started at Ford open prison near Arundel, Sussex, after guards tried to breathalyse convicts to check for contraband alcohol. |
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Justice Minister Hideo Usui said Tuesday death-row convicts seeking retrials could be executed if their demands for retrials are deemed highly likely to be rejected. |
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A classic example is The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert Heinlein, in which convicts and political dissidents are transported to lunar colonies. |
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The number of convicts transported to North America is not verified although it has been estimated to be 50,000 by John Dunmore Lang and 120,000 by Thomas Keneally. |
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With the exception of those years, the Transportation Act led to a decrease in whipping of convicts, thus avoiding potentially inflammatory public displays. |
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Government supervision may be imposed, including house arrest, and convicts may be required to conform to particularized guidelines as part of a parole or probation regimen. |
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An alternate practice, borrowed from the Spanish, was to commute the death sentence and allow the use of convicts as a labour force for the colonies. |
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This enabled some convicts to resume a more normal life, to marry and raise a family, and a few to develop the colonies while removing them from the society. |
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The penal system required convicts to work on government projects such as road construction, building works and mining, or be assigned to free individuals as unpaid labour. |
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Most British or Irish convicts who were sentenced to transportation, however, completed their sentences in British jails and were not transported at all. |
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Having cleared the port on the mainland, the ship put into Lundy, where the cargo was removed and stored in a cave built by the convicts, before setting sail again. |
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No attempt is made to assess the justice of the laws which convicted them, but rather the poem highlights the brutalisation of the punishment that all convicts share. |
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