Civilian sleuths are being sought by Essex Police to work alongside detectives in major investigations. |
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But instead of tracking spies, these sleuths are out to expose surly salespeople to improve the country's standards of customer service. |
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The Sonnets, the most disputed of all collections of poetry in the English language, have given sleuths and biographers years of puzzlement. |
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Harr excels, however, at anatomizing the minds of his sleuths, and gets good mileage out of the various eccentrics encountered along the way. |
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Corporate tax sleuths got hold of this and are now using it in a convoluted way to avoid U.S. taxes altogether on profits they make from foreign operations. |
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Meanwhile, authors who don't feel the itch to moonlight use a lot of ingenuity to keep their series sleuths on the qui vive. |
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But the reader soon finds that Maigret is closer to essential human concerns than the other great sleuths. |
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Retrieval of supposedly 'deleted' confidential documents is a favourite pastime of sleuths in search of file remnants. |
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If, however, you have older children who are great sleuths, challenge them with your very best hiding techniques. |
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There are already many comma sleuths, type addicts, and grammatical high priests engrossed only in the techniques. |
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Armchair sleuths have been competing for years to determine the identity of one of the most notorious serial killers. |
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Earlier, TV licence sleuths were held at gunpoint after a masked gang rammed their detector van. |
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In common with characters in comic strips and television serials and situation comedies, fictional sleuths owe at least part of their familiarity to the fact that they keep appearing in one story after another. |
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In the age of the internet, his apparent reclusiveness – not to mention the conspiracy themes in his work – made his identity and whereabouts a compelling mystery for online sleuths. |
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Popular culture would have you believe that profilers are some type of super sleuths, who solve the type of crime that is beyond the ability of the everyday detective. |
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Another month to go for super sleuths to help Agent 009 crack the case. |
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They range from criminal prosecutors at the Department of Justice to international affairs lawyers at the State Department to financial-fraud sleuths at the FBI, Treasury Department and the Department of Homeland Security. |
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These are scattered among the exhibits and are connected to a central Info net from which the sleuths among you can glean even more background information about particular exhibits, themes or scientific principles. |
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How can these young sleuths unravel a mystery that took place generations ago, and how can they appease the suffering of the children of the past whose school was burned down? |
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He reasserted the role of weapons inspectors as disarmament verifiers rather than sleuths or detectives trying to find the proverbial needle in the haystack. |
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Over the years, armchair sleuths and scientists alike have used a number of terms to describe the feet: severed, dismembered, detached, disarticulated. |
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Online sleuths posted their findings on GuttenPlag Wiki, a website. |
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The accounting sleuths have, says HP, uncovered evidence that Autonomy bloated its sales, for instance by inflating revenue from software packaged with other firms' hardware. |
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Lovecraft on the genre, the weird marriage of poetry and pulp in Clark Ashton Smith, pulp magazines and short-fiction, supernatural sleuths in Weird Tales, and more. |
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And that's why when our sleuths are assigned any project, they dig right uptill they obliterate the chances of anything being left out or overlooked regarding the subject. |
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