We find imprecations against people who break laws, defile a sanctuary, commit perjury, or pollute a grave, amongst other things. |
|
So the bill legitimises perjury and it legitimises breaches of the Oaths and Declarations Act. |
|
His perjury has now been completely expiated, and is very unlikely to recur. |
|
The threat of indictment for perjury, however, appears to have refreshed his memory. |
|
He was found guilty of perjury and perverting the course of justice in relation to this case. |
|
She had been charged with perjury, after claiming in court she had never set foot in there. |
|
There was an inquiry, I think, because he was then subsequently convicted of perjury. |
|
It was not sufficient, by way of rebuttal of the perjury charge, to identify some other possible explanation for Mr Sage's evidence. |
|
Another antique rule provided that a corporation could not be indicted for a felony like perjury. |
|
Other panelists then joined in discussing whether, if true, this would suggest a perjury rap for him. |
|
He is being tried for the nonbailable charge of economic plunder as well as perjury, illegal use of an alias and graft. |
|
One of those cases saw him being acquitted of suborning perjury in a case involving an animal rights terrorist. |
|
He has a long history of accusation of unethical acts from suborning perjury to driving under the influence of marijuana. |
|
At present perjury proceedings are difficult and complex in such instances. |
|
Voter registrants have to check a box and sign a form under penalty of perjury that they are a U.S. citizen, of voting age, and not an ex-felon. |
|
The system can require an oath in criminal court and enforce penalties for perjury. |
|
I have evidence of perjury and the perversion of the course of justice and misfeasance in public office. |
|
He is facing a string of charges ranging from perjury to economic plunder, a crime that carries the death penalty or life in prison. |
|
You want me to lose three years income against a triple perjurer when the defendant is committing perjury. |
|
They collude, have unlimited access to finance, and bring witnesses who are coached to commit perjury. |
|
|
Over the prison phone, he'd been coaching his alibi witness to commit perjury, so he had to explain the general setup inside a courtroom. |
|
Your Honour, the prosecution witnesses committed perjury throughout the whole trial. |
|
Mercury rules the animal spirit and is the author of subtlety, tricks, devices, and perjury. |
|
We can live with a perjurer in the White House, and a suborner of perjury, and an obstructor of justice. |
|
It was about obstruction of justice, subornation of perjury, witness tampering. |
|
A lawyer must help his client to put on as strong a case as possible, but a lawyer may not suborn perjury. |
|
The potential perjury obstruction of justice and suborning a witness is a sideshow? |
|
And I said, the congressman himself who knows this thing is false, is asking you to suborn perjury? |
|
And that's obstruction of justice, that's suborning perjury, and that's our case in California. |
|
Physicians known to be guilty of gross negligence are allowed to continue to practice. Lawyers who obviously suborn perjury are not disbarred. |
|
A Los Angeles jury convicted him of forgery, attempted grand theft, and perjury. |
|
There was no reason to believe Wu would destroy evidence in the case or suborn perjury, the court said. |
|
The noble lord spends most of his time alone and prefers not to talk about the four-year sentence he received for perjury. |
|
She has now withdrawn this claim, leaving her open to possible prosecution for perjury. |
|
The allegations resulting in the perjury trial forced him to quit the candidacy, and he was subsequently expelled from the party for five years. |
|
Set aside all the blah-blah about whether he should be indicting people for perjury. |
|
That trial proceeded, I prosecuted, and the jury duly convicted him of perjury. |
|
On Friday, Burge was released from home monitoring, the conclusion of a four and a half year federal sentence – not for torture, but for perjury. |
|
The student had thus committed the offence of making a false statement and perjury. |
|
He is being investigated for allegations including perjury and plunder. |
|
|
Historically, cops believed that they could commit perjury on behalf of their brother officers with impunity. |
|
When prosecutors were finished, 20 attendees were convicted of conspiring to commit perjury and obstruct justice. |
|
Personally, I believe McNamee mostly because he is under legal threat not to commit perjury. |
|
Also indicted, on charges of conspiracy to commit perjury, were Damion Butler, Ms. Kim's manager, and Monique Dopwell, a friend. |
|
They are not quite true in the normal sense, but if made under oath they would not be prosecutable for perjury, either. |
|
Equally, the idea of ensnaring a government official in a perjury trap, which is what Mr Starr seems to have done, is a post-Watergate strategy. |
|
On June 27, Estrada was arraigned for the lesser charge of perjury. |
|
Described at the time as a third-rate burglary, with the obstruction of justice and perjury which followed, it brought down a president. |
|
The South Yorkshire police listed perjury, perverting the course of justice and assault. |
|
Do you understand that intentionally breaking that promise would be perjury and a criminal offence under the law? |
|
Statement that the subscriber consents to jurisdiction in federal court and provides the counter notice information under penalty of perjury. |
|
Mr. Paul Forseth: One of the other things that all of you mention is the difficulty around perjury. |
|
The witness, after all, has little reason to lie and faces perjury proceedings if he does. |
|
Lying, or not telling the whole truth, when you are under oath is called perjury and it is a serious crime. |
|
In the survey, college administrators were asked to state, under penalty of perjury, whether they enrolled high-school students in the classes legally. |
|
Then, after the headlines came out, the sources recanted, and they have since been convicted of perjury. |
|
The woman was acquitted of perjury, which could have landed the mother of three 15 years in jail. |
|
He was convicted of perjury, served 30 days, and went back to a swashbuckling career in contraband. |
|
The bill legalises perjury, and that is something we find to be offensive. |
|
His retention may indicate any federal case could revolve around more than the perjury and obstruction charges. |
|
|
That is, he might have felt that not only might he be charged with suborning perjury if he put her on the stand, he might actually be suborning perjury. |
|
The more time one spends with Armstrong, however, the more one suspects that the focus of his fury is not the implication that he tried to suborn Cogut's perjury. |
|
The man was acquitted but the young women were charged with perjury. |
|
I'm nostalgic for the days when perjury was an impeachable offense. |
|
Some years later he had confessed to the crime, and was convicted of perjury, but was unable to be retried for the killing itself. |
|
In 2007 three of the prosecution witnesses at the original murder trial were convicted of perjury and each jailed for 18 months. |
|
In 2009 two further witnesses from the original trial were also charged with perjury. |
|
In perjury, the capias, warrant, and affidavit, are good evidence that a cause was depending. |
|
I know exactly what I have to do, and I didn't want to commit perjury even by chance, even though I may have a problem once in a while with the language, because English is not my mother language. |
|
In addition, witnesses who lie under oath may be charged with perjury. |
|
However, if the act of perjury exposes another person to the risk of legal prosecution or conviction, the penalty shall be reduced by one half to two thirds. |
|
Moreover, the law of the latter shall apply in case of perjury. |
|
Did you know that Raymond Gravel is committing perjury, that he has already turned back on a written commitment, a solemn promise made before God and men? |
|
A statement that, under penalty of perjury, the information in the notification is represented to be accurate and that the complaint is authorized by the copyright holder. |
|
In other words, once the person has objected, what they say can never be used against them, unless they commit perjury or make another contradictory statement. |
|
In June 2003 a deputy accused Prime Minister Miller of perjury. |
|
In addition, for an offence of perjury to exist, there must be proof of a false declaration or statement made under oath or solemn declaration with the intent to mislead. |
|
Mr Coulson was charged by Strathclyde Police over allegations that he committed perjury during the trial of former MSP Tommy Sheridan. |
|
It says every officer who made a statement that contained untrue evidence may have perverted the course of justice, and some who were witnesses in court may have committed perjury. |
|
He alleges having been charged pursuant to an entrapment operation, and claims that the individuals who participated in the operation committed perjury. |
|
|
So often the professional attitude is to take everything they hear with a lot of skepticism, knowing the backdrop of the potentiality for perjury. |
|
The ATA provided that the answers and any derivative evidence could not be used to incriminate that person in any future criminal proceeding, except for perjury or the giving of contradictory evidence. |
|
If the act of perjury is committed during a criminal investigation or trial, the penalty shall be a term of up to 10 years' imprisonment with hard labour. |
|
The charges included corruption, perjury, bid-fixing and fraud. |
|
As to the depriving the defendant of waging his law, it was thought, the practice merited discouragement, as a temptation to perjury. |
|
The jury debated for just three hours before acquitting Mr Posada on April 8th. Even though Cuba and Venezuela had objected to the perjury charges at first, they were outraged by the verdict. |
|
Regarding the prosecutors in this case, I say only that if the perpetuation of power is predicated on perjury, then the U. S. Attorneys are as solid as the Rock of Gibraltar. |
|
Advocates cannot condone the use of perjured evidence and, if they become aware of perjury at any time, they must immediately seek the client's consent to bring it to the attention of the court. |
|
I should add that the criminal sanction for perjury was not invoked in any of the cases with respect to copyright holders actually having perjured themselves. |
|
A taxpayer, when signing the jurat on the tax return, swears under penalties of perjury that the tax return is true, accurate, and complete. |
|
Before hearing any witness, expert or interpreter, the Panel shall solemnly invite such person to tell the truth, subject to the sanctions of perjury. |
|
The clerk provided inculpatory testimony against the defendant at his perjury trial. |
|
In the olden days, the oath ordinarily included the administration of curses, by which the person who took the oath called the wrath of the heavens upon himself in case of perjury. |
|
Incriminating evidence obtained during compelled testimony could not be used or received against the person in further criminal proceedings, except in prosecutions for perjury and giving contradictory evidence. |
|
That employee got charged with perjury for starters, frivolousity amongst legal grounds and harassment. |
|
If you don't remember you are a nitwit. If you do answer, well you know what the penalty is for perjury. |
|
They were charged with perjury but allowed a conditional discharge. |
|
Aside from plunder, Estrada has also been charged with illegal use of an alias, perjury and graft and corruption, which are all bailable offenses. |
|
Galeano is facing prosecution for illegal deprivation of liberty, extortion, instigation of perjury, and embezzlement in connection with the AMIA lawsuit. |
|
We declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct and that this declaration was executed on March 22, 2005, at Seattle, Washington. |
|