There is the famous joke about the man who kills his parents and then looks for leniency at his murder trial because he is an orphan. |
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I hope baseball sees fit to extend some leniency to a flawed human being who made a serious mistake. |
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He's publicly turned down a deal for leniency in exchange for information on his surveillance activities. |
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Anyone who saw the offence in question must be wondering exactly what part of that particular video nasty gives any serious cause for leniency. |
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He said there would be a period of leniency but insisted that this would be short-lived. |
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South Africa too, will seek more leniency in international trade of elephant products. |
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The son pleads guilty, tearfully begging for leniency based on his claim that his father molested him. |
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So I think the rules of engagement give the military the leniency they need to accomplish their mission. |
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Our liberal elite understands when leniency has to end and cruel and unusual punishment must begin. |
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In September 2003, after the inspections and after having sent letters requesting information, the IMI group applied for leniency. |
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Robespierre dared not risk the countercharge of leniency to a former peer, and Biron was guillotined. |
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The Commission's leniency policy has proved a very potent weapon to encourage companies to own up to cartels. |
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To aid detection, the DoJ developed a leniency programme that provides incentives for companies to confess and snitch on rivals. |
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The outrageous practices revealed this week will doubtless be treated with the same leniency. |
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There is also an irony attached to the QC hitting out at leniency shown to McCoist, Diouf and Bougherra when he sought exactly that for Lennon. |
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Greece vigorously denied asking for leniency from the Washington-based lender of last resort. |
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Prosecutors ignore or count the past conviction, depending on whether they believe the case deserves leniency. |
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You may argue that anyone can build his own scenery and that explains Forge World's leniency for scenery pricing. |
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The evaluation found that when complaints do reach the courts, a great deal of leniency is afforded to perpetrators. |
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The review committee has the ability to invoke leniency or demand payment of a penalty. |
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In addition, it is clear that there has been no leniency in the enforcement of the reformed Pact. |
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Developing countries have also continued to review approaches to including the introduction of leniency programs in cartel investigations. |
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The superior, Dabadie, showed a great leniency while accepting a significant part of the debt to which the Court had condemned it. |
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Both accused Johnson of fostering a leniency that abetted crime. |
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Grading leniency is a removable contaminant of student ratings. |
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Nobody really expected leniency, but still there was hope because the charges against the journalists were so far-fetched. |
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The self-declared caliphate is targeting its leniency, such as it is, along strictly sectarian lines. |
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But as elections approach, the Russian authorities are unlikely to show a sense of humor or leniency toward the renegade artists. |
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Why would hardened soldiers, quite willing to commit a suicide bombing, politely exchange information for leniency? |
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The newly promoted person may also attempt to minimize the status difference through self-deprecation and a surfeit of leniency toward the new supervisees. |
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The application of parental company liability has significant effects on leniency applications, which should be carefully considered by corporate groups. |
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Now other defendants are using his case as a springboard to plead for leniency. |
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The reason for the leniency shown to Merthyr is thought to have been connected to the club's apparent move to the professional Northern code. |
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A study by Jane Sprott in 1998 attempts to shed some light on to the issue of public dissatisfaction with and perceived leniency towards the treatment of young offenders and youth crime in general. |
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Furthermore, more leniency with regards to the amount of hours one must work a week to retain the benefit has been given to persons approaching the age of retirement and disabled persons. |
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The leniency granted to software producers contrasts sharply with the requirements of product testing and standards, warranties, and consumer protection for other goods and services. |
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The principles implanted through school discipline will be based upon pleasure in growth and achievement, not upon extremes of repression or leniency. |
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Since the reform of the SGP, both the corrective and preventive arms have been applied in full accordance with the provisions of the reform pact and any leniency in enforcement has not occurred. |
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In any case, a little leniency goes a long way. |
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She called for leniency, longer deadlines and weaker objectives. |
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The war became a personal issue for the king, fueled by his growing belief that British leniency would be taken as weakness by the Americans. |
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Despite the lack of change to the law, there has been a clear trend toward leniency in sentencing and even charging people, some of them doctors, who have assisted in suicides and have been convicted under the Code. |
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Absolute mercy towards the sinner, the most threatened lost sheep, and the most complete absence of leniency possible towards sin and its instigator. |
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The son of Petong, raised 4lb for that win, does no more than required and, as such, may have been shown some leniency by the handicapper. |
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Coke was only saved from imprisonment by Cecil, who pleaded with the King to show leniency, which he granted. |
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The Occupation of the Ruhr led the Dawes Plan which allowed the German government more leniency in paying reparations. |
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But he argued that his client was advised to plead guilty in his initial trial because his lawyers were lead to believe by the judge that that was he only course of action which attract any leniency in sentencing. |
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Although they believed these people should be given a chance and admired the effort facilitators made to help and motivate them, participants felt there was a tendency toward undue leniency for these unmotivated students. |
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Thus, the applicant criticises the Commission for having relied on vague and uncorroborated allegations contained in leniency applications submitted by other undertakings, despite its Hearing Officer concerns. |
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Each perspective is then linked to a specific explanation for criminal justice leniency in cases of intimate partner violence. |
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This harsh provision is compounded by a law stipulating that second-degree murderers should serve a minimum of 15 years in prison, no matter how immature, remorseful or otherwise deserving of leniency they may be. |
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Something beyond commiseration for those who suffer, something even more than understanding and leniency for those at fault, mercy includes all these qualities but goes beyond them. |
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In this case, a number of the mitigating factors cited by the complainant in his complaint were put before his court martial and resulted in at least some degree of leniency in sentencing. |
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Finally, the Commission misapplied the leniency notice and the fining guidelines when determining the fine relating to Belgium, Germany and Luxembourg. |
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The billionaire was convicted of fraud last year but was allowed to opt for community service instead of prison because of the leniency shown in Italy for those over 70 years old who are convicted of crimes. |
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Despite the relative leniency of the penalties imposed on the four, the judges took the view that their convictions were liable to discourage the media from doing such work. |
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On Judgment Day, Peter, dressed in striped prison garb and looking forlorn behind sturdy iron bars, begged the judge for leniency, but to no avail. |
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So if the egotistical Frenchman has it in him to be penitent, I believe the FA should treat him with a degree of leniency and not inflict a life sentence. |
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As for errors in payments made to EU regions by member states, we will not tolerate any leniency there: the European Commission will claw back the money each time national administrations do not manage to spend it correctly. |
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The information is also provided to the defense at trial, and is given to the judge who sentences the cooperator, even if prosecutors ultimately seek leniency because the witness has provided assistance. |
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There is no leniency given to endangering other people's lives. |
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To me, Scrabble isn't about leisureliness or leniency or friendship. |
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The Marapendi lagoon and the Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon have suffered with the leniency of the authorities and the growth in the number of apartment buildings close by. |
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Leniency also should be extended to those insurgents and terrorists who give up the armed struggle. |
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Leniency may in particular be shown if the candidate narrowly misses grades. |
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