The nation's legal nightmare around non-violent drug offenses is the primary cross he bears. |
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Our newest medium of camp marketing communications probably sports the most flagrant offenses. |
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Violations of drug laws and gambling laws were the two most prevalent types of offenses investigated through communications intercepts. |
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Almost 60 percent of California's three strikes cases involve nonviolent offenses in which the courts hand down sentences of 25 years to life. |
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I still hold a grudge against him and he has only added a laundry list of offenses to the grudge sheet in the ensuing years. |
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Reluctance even to use the term mutiny has resulted in troops being court-martialed, if at all, for lesser offenses. |
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Typical offenses are growing cannabis, circulating counterfeit money, theft, homicide, and entering the country illegally. |
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Is there tension between one of the league's perennially elite offenses and one of its most porous defenses? |
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His confinement emasculates and asexualizes him, penalizing him for his youthful offenses. |
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We have to assure ourselves that others are not committing similar offenses and getting away with it. |
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In practice, this meant all but the most atrocious offenses got mere wrist slaps. |
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The investigation cites possible offenses, including involuntary manslaughter, assault, battery, dereliction of duty and conspiracy. |
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The Pre-Crime Unit may, in fact, be seizing and incarcerating those who were never going to commit any offenses. |
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In the Eighteenth Century, imbeciles but not idiots could be executed for capital offenses. |
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The team's no-huddle and hurry-up offenses are working nearly to perfection. |
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Pursuant to English common law, the King had flexible powers to pardon offenses either before or after indictment, conviction or sentencing. |
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In July 2004, he was formally charged with various offenses, including terrorism, attacking civilians and murder. |
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Incidentally, if you have a strong stomach, this New Yorker article provides more details about the offenses and the investigation. |
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Nearly three fourths of women incarcerated in federal prisons in 1998 were charged with drug offenses. |
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Rather, the police should take swift and decisive action against such offenses as harboring criminals, dealing drugs and swindling people. |
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While he may not have a violent crime on record, he's spent plenty of time in the can for other offenses. |
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The scientific evidence notwithstanding, all US states allow juveniles to be tried as adults for some offenses. |
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Compared with other Nordic countries, Finland has very low rates for theft and narcotics offenses but an above average rate for assault. |
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Thankfully, not every conscientious journalist is abandoned by management for perceived offenses against powerful newsmakers. |
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Principals can unilaterally remove students involved in weapons or drug offenses and those at risk of harming themselves or others. |
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In an era of the steady, dour beat of half-court offenses and slap-happy defenses, this Carolina team sings a pretty nostalgic song. |
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But what's overlooked is that offenses are overmanaged and in a sense, underemphasized. |
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And then the lower tier, class C, which comprise non-arrestable offenses, are steroids and tranquilizers, benzodiazepines and so on. |
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For second offenses, trainers will be prohibited from entering horses at the track for 15 days. |
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The Bucs still have one of the league's least-productive offenses, particularly in tight games. |
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He's good at showing different looks so offenses have a hard time getting a bead on what the defense is doing. |
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Traffic offenses are no longer punishable by monetary compensation but by greasing the palm of an officer. |
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The pyrotechnics of these offenses would impress even a fireworks factory worker. |
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The game started with both offenses moving the ball well only to have field goal attempts sail wide. |
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They were subsequently charged with dereliction of duty, assault and other offenses. |
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There are also circumstances where delinquents disapprove of criminal offenses as strongly as nondelinquents. |
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Those are offenses properly addressed by judges, juries, and prison wardens. |
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Wayne will bring adequate size and a polished game to one of the league's most potent offenses. |
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In the past decade, on average, the rate of juvenile delinquency remained at between 10 to 14 per cent of the criminal offenses in the city. |
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The number of juveniles arrested for drug-related offenses has increased 80 percent in the last seven years. |
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At times, the Cowboys are akin to a full-court press with the pressure they bring on offenses. |
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Frustratingly, this often leaves law enforcement authorities with their hands tied, unable to crack down on offenses in their own jurisdiction. |
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These kickers can kick long fields goals, play with good offenses and do not miss many kicks. |
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He was, however, sentenced to 18 months in prison for immigration offenses and document forgery. |
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I apologize for his wordings and actions and I apologize in advance for any other offenses he does later on. |
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Singapore has requested that the two countries must first agree on the list of extraditable crimes, including terrorism-related offenses, for such a treaty to be signed. |
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Many of those who have become cops in New York seem to have ceased to address such minor offenses over the past few days. |
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Typically, adultery charges are added to cases where there have been other offenses. |
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On and offline, offenses ranged from awful Tinder messages to violent threats on Twitter to street stalking. |
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While violent offenses are dramatically down in bed Stuy, pockets of violence persist here. |
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Less than eight percent of sentenced federal women prisoners are there for violent crimes or weapon offenses. |
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In the 1997 defendant cohorts, drug court participants showed significantly lower rearrest rates only when rearrest for drug offenses was the criterion. |
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The current '80s crop of cartoon favorites, sitcom has-beens, embarrassing pop relics, and fashion offenses takes what was essentially kitsch to begin with and parodies it. |
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In the same year, the U.S. requested his extradition for the offenses that he is now facing a decade later. |
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Fullerton's most recent report indicates zero offenses even when considering non-campus locales. |
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Sobriety brought a new, kinder, and gentler Womack, who often expressed remorse and regret over his past offenses. |
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If Randa hits like he did in the second half, and Lopez was to continue his tear, they would have one of the more formidable offenses in baseball. |
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A broad bipartisan House Judiciary Committee majority found his sins to rise to the level of impeachable offenses. |
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What goes beyond the cataloguing of the hidden structures, the invisible powers, seductions, and numerous offenses we have been preoccupied with for so long? |
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Both women were convicted of minor nonviolent drug offenses. |
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But he remains an integral part of one of the NFL's most potent offenses. |
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This is usually the case for offenses like shoplifting or burglary. |
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Before the hiring surge began in 2006, misconduct arrests for offenses like drunken driving fluctuated. |
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The federal prison population has mushroomed since the 1980s when stiff mandatory sentences were introduced for federal offenses, especially drug crimes. |
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Unrepentant for past crimes and ungoverned by reason or morality, he relentlessly seeks tools to commit infinitely worse offenses against humanity. |
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She figured that the city's best shot at making punishments for slumlords and their ilk stick was to make the underlying offenses civil infractions. |
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The military commission is confirmed as having authority to try even the most serious non-capital offenses with trial panels of only three officers. |
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He has a rap sheet in California that includes jail time for narcotics-related offenses and fraud. |
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Employment discrimination is one of many collateral consequences that individuals with felony convictions face, including many people with non-violent drug offenses. |
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Despite the relative infrequency of infractions on campus, the university community has continued to try and educate students about the issues surrounding academic offenses. |
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Theologians and inquisitors attributed these offenses to the devil's work, to which socially marginal, uneducated women were seen as especially susceptible. |
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The second hypothesis specifically predicted that youth with childhood onset conduct disorder would commit more aggressive offenses than adolescent onset offenders. |
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Their success seemed to depend on their intensity, and their intensity depended on the rhetorical ability of the preacher to inspire a sense of contrition for past offenses. |
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Finally, probationers with less extensive histories of legal involvement for drug-related offenses are potentially at higher risk for psychiatric symptoms. |
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As offenses go, dirty jokes just don't register with me any more. |
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The triggers for conflicts range from petty offenses, such as theft and jesting, to more serious crimes, like homicide. |
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For this reason, it can be argued that offenses that are mala prohibita are not really crimes at all. |
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Admiralty courts, also known as maritime courts, are courts exercising jurisdiction over all maritime contracts, torts, injuries, and offenses. |
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Together with an actus reus, mens rea forms the bedrock of criminal law, although strict liability offenses have encroached on this notion. |
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They then provided pages of quotations, detailing Roman and Orthodox liturgies that they considered guilty of the same alleged offenses. |
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Suetonius states that a total of 35 senators and 300 knights were executed for offenses during Claudius' reign. |
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In the past, such offenses resulted in little more than a slap on the wrist in the form of fines imposed by the Ethics Commission. |
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Moctezuma issued new laws that further separated nobles from commoners and instituted the death penalty for adultery and other offenses. |
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Jurors would be selected by the sheriffs and British soldiers would be tried outside the colony for alleged offenses. |
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It was both his duty to punish offenses and stop them from being committed. |
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Statutes of limitations for criminal offenses are in many ways the product of balancing competing policy interests. |
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No arrests were made at the time but Jagger, Richards and their friend art dealer Robert Fraser were subsequently charged with drug offenses. |
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The data becomes especially illuminating when broken down into the types of offenses for which offenders recidivate. |
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The Tulsa County Sheriff's Department says Quintine Cornelius Harper was arrested and charged with kidnapping and weapons offenses. |
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Tebow's and Bradford's production and leadership are undeniable, but their recruitments, offenses and personalities are vastly different. |
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Arrestable offenses were abolished in 2006, and today crimes are classified as indictable or summary offenses. |
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Additionally, driving while intoxicated in some states may be a misdemeanor if a first offense, but a felony on subsequent offenses. |
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Some offenses, though similar in nature, may be felonies or misdemeanors depending on the circumstances. |
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Assault or offenses against honor were dealt with in a similar fashion, through a fine called sarhaed. |
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A day fine system is in effect and also applied to offenses such as speeding. |
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Mala prohibita, on the other hand, refers to offenses that do not have wrongfulness associated with them. |
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He Kabul to eliminate police and court penalisation of trafficking victims for offenses committed as a direct result of being trafficked. |
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He has been charged by Spain with alleged tax offenses, money laundering and corruption among individuals in other cases of corruption. |
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Mala in se offenses are felonies, property crimes, immoral acts and corrupt acts by public officials. |
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An acquittal also does not bar prosecution for the same offenses under a statute of a different jurisdiction. |
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According to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the majority of inmates held in federal prisons are convicted of drug offenses. |
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In offenses of absolute liability, other than the prohibited act, it may not be necessary to show the act was intentional. |
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Brewster said that when the agreement comes into effect it will broaden the scope of extraditable offenses based on clear and modern procedures. |
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In 1940, a supplemental extradition treaty added narcotics offenses to the list of extraditable offenses. |
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Not all offenses require specific intent, and a misreading, even in good faith, may not excuse the criminal conduct. |
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Mala prohibita statutes are usually imposed strictly, as there does not need to be mens rea component for punishment under those offenses, just the act itself. |
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In the latter case, subsequent offenses are a Class A felony. |
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Only students who have defaulted on federal student loans or have been convicted of drug offenses, and have not completed a rehabilitation program, are excluded. |
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In 2011, 455 Mozambicans and 47 foreign nationals were charged with drug-related offenses, of which 111 Mozambicans and an unknown number of foreign nationals were convicted. |
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Dein rejected that argument, concluding that the connection between the property and the drug offenses was not substantial enough to make it forfeitable under federal law. |
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The Judicial Council also hears appeals from those who have been accused of chargeable offenses that can result in defrocking or revocation of membership. |
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We are investigating several unprosecuted offenses from the past. |
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At Monday's opening session, it considered a draft law that would impose fines of up to 50 million riels and up to seven years in prison for corruption offenses. |
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While crimes are typically broken into degrees or classes to punish appropriately, all offenses can be divided into 'mala in se' and 'mala prohibita' laws. |
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The pirate articles of captains Bartholomew Roberts and John Phillips specify marooning as a punishment for cheating one's fellow pirates or other offenses. |
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On Monday, Estrada eluded arrest for bailable offenses filed against him by posting bail before the Sandiganabayan and having his fingerprints taken. |
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Jonathan Stickland, R-Bedford, filled out witness registration forms for people who were not in the Capitol but that no one committed any prosecutable offenses. |
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Internationally, Congress has the power to define and punish piracies and offenses against the Law of Nations, to declare war and make rules of war. |
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One of Ai's apparent offenses was to puckishly feed that paranoia. |
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However, due to the Berber revolt the Umayyad governors were forced to protect their southern flank and were unable to mount offenses against the Asturians. |
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Aside from plunder, Estrada has also been charged with illegal use of an alias, perjury and graft and corruption, which are all bailable offenses. |
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