Instead, you have to deal with new cellmates, who are strangers at best and troublemakers sent to keep you company at worst. |
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The crime wave has been attributed to the arrival of out-of-town troublemakers. |
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Teenage troublemakers who are causing upset in a corner of Morecambe are being warned against inflicting further misery on residents. |
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He doesn't like troublemakers and has his own way of dishing out his own ferocious brand of punishment. |
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He would like to see the courts taking a tougher line with young troublemakers. |
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This time CCTV will be closely monitored around the ground and troublemakers will be instantly arrested. |
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The officers have radios and mobile phones and have authority to ask passengers to produce tickets and to ask troublemakers to get off. |
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The authority was continuing to crack down on troublemakers and was making streets cleaner. |
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It dismisses an entire culture in the eastern part of our nation as troublemakers and traitors. |
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Before I was locked down, 3 troublemakers entered my cell and commenced to verbally assail my ailing celly. |
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The police last week in Sunderland preened themselves on how good intelligence had enabled them to spot and control the troublemakers. |
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Two specialist teams armed with the latest surveillance technology will target troublemakers who plague estates throughout Bolton. |
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Police have been monitoring the site and using covert surveillance to trap the troublemakers. |
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We had the knuckleheads, troublemakers, drinkers, the terminally unlucky and the hopeless dreamers. |
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But local police officers say removing the benches would stop troublemakers from congregating there. |
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The troublemakers are being 'kettled' around Nelson's Column by a ring of several hundred officers. |
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Officers want teachers to join them on night-time patrol so they can identify juvenile troublemakers and help bring them to book. |
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The Clubwatch set-up will let door staff give their counterparts at other venues advance warning of potential troublemakers. |
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He said most of the trouble was down to a handful of hard-core troublemakers who were well known to police and the courts. |
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Two wardens will cover each rank to combat the problems of queue-jumpers, thugs and troublemakers. |
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And they have applauded the role of the local community in helping the police to weed out the troublemakers. |
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She had never actually seen a widgie but she knew Stella's get up was exactly the kind of thing troublemakers wore. |
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Neither should travellers be automatically regarded as troublemakers, she contends. |
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The Acomb crackdown should curb their activities, and those of the troublemakers who have tarred all teenagers with the same brush. |
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None other than those infamous troublemakers and malcontents, Winston Churchill and Thomas Jefferson, respectively. |
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Landlords share information about troublemakers and telephone each other to warn about rowdy drinkers. |
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Park users are calling for more resources for the parks constabulary and measures to lock out troublemakers at night. |
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They believe the estate has become a dumping ground for troublemakers from other estates. |
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A second wall is being built around the old walled city, and a prison is being cleared out to house the troublemakers. |
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Behavioural support staff are helping to keep a watchful eye on troublemakers at a Swindon school. |
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Residents living near an Accrington park that has been plagued by young troublemakers are being urged to reclaim it. |
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Plainclothes and uniformed officers will be on patrol to prevent would-be troublemakers boarding flights. |
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The police always say that they need to be able to identify troublemakers and having CCTV cameras would make this possible. |
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For some time, licensees have used the early warning bleeper system to alert one another and the police of any troublemakers at large. |
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Uniform and plain clothes officers will attempt to snare troublemakers before warmer weather increases fire risks. |
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But police say anti-social behaviour remains a problem and vowed to crackdown on troublemakers. |
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The authorities need to formulate and implement effective measures to keep these troublemakers off the streets. |
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These new powers will give us the ability to intervene when there are signs of trouble and get rid of the troublemakers. |
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Police are warning troublemakers that their behaviour will not be tolerated following another weekend of assaults and vandalism. |
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He said a night-time curfew for known troublemakers might be the only way to make the area safe. |
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Residents have also been urged to gather information on troublemakers in a bid to turn the estate's fortunes around. |
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Authorities described the youths as troublemakers bored during a current school summer vacation. |
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The media, police and state government are seeking to intimidate and demonise them, depict them as violent troublemakers and force them out of the city. |
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And he warned the troublemakers that they would be brought to book over the next few months using evidence gathered on the night and CCTV video footage of the disorder. |
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Every society honors its live conformists and its dead troublemakers. |
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And we are empowering the bullies, the delinquents and the troublemakers. |
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The army has said it will deploy elite troops to deal with violence and armed troublemakers. |
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They realized that 50 officers, moving together aggressively, could chase off 500 troublemakers lacking any organization. |
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It would be nice if we could identify troublemakers in advance, but it's not easy to do it. |
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It was natural for us to attempt to paint ourselves in a more favorable light while making out the others as the troublemakers and causers of ruin. |
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If you are confronted by troublemakers or criminals while you're in your car, honk loudly to attract attention. |
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In both cases, he says, authorities have glossed over political grievances and focused on individual troublemakers like Mr Thaksin. |
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Zig and Zag The Big Breakfast's resident troublemakers are the unsung hero of fashion's faux fur moment. |
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The organisers, visibly disconcerted, hastily improvise a disjointed discussion with the representatives of the troublemakers. |
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Robert Fry, said that fixed checkpoints would be replaced by patrols to hunt out troublemakers. |
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The labor camps are often used to punish dissidents and other troublemakers. |
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Hundreds of potential troublemakers have been stopped long before they even begin to contemplate actually perpetrating a violent attack. |
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Employers ought to be able to cope with any troublemakers, without trampling on the rights of the vast majority of honest and committed workers. |
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Fears of a panic after the European elections are receding: even the most resolute troublemakers seem ready to rally around. |
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There will be no shortage of demonstrators and troublemakers in Brussels either, unless you ensure that there is real involvement. |
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This conclusion might be the preferred option of the officers hunting for troublemakers and dissenting voices in the European political scene. |
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Freed from the overarching mutual threat, the major powers started to take a closer interest in the cases of small regional troublemakers. |
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The government don't see it that way, they say that we are troublemakers because we demand our rights. |
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Before the match there was trouble in a little square outside the ground as riot police with batons waded in to quell troublemakers attached to both clubs. |
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We got rid of the troublemakers and we really started to do well. |
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Lately it has become a meeting point for young troublemakers. |
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The move means that troublemakers who are known to the police but have slipped through the net so far because they have avoided arrest can now be banned. |
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The monthly event, stewarded by the cruisers themselves, aims at driving away the minority of troublemakers who race each other and perform dangerous, screeching wheelspins. |
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As for the peaceable pro-democracy advocates like Dinh, Long and Thuc, the AmCham appears to share the Politburo's view: they are troublemakers who are in the way. |
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In Limassol on Sunday, during the AEL-APOEL league match, the police had a plan for dealing with the troublemakers and implemented it. |
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Thefts in the town centre were also down 16 per cent and police praised licensees for their help in dealing with troublemakers. |
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Doubtless, authoritarian governments are in close touch too, sharing the best ways of dealing with the pestilential gadflies and troublemakers of the internet. |
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Implementation of adequate recording and research methods to enable violent troublemakers to be prosecuted and tried without undue delay and in conditions guaranteeing a fair trial. |
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As long as a leaseholder allows troublemakers to visit his or tier apartment, the root problem will not go away. |
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Abu Saleh, an Emirati, said he stayed up late one night to catch the troublemakers, but in vain. |
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I am concerned that a teacher trying to break up a schoolyard fight and confine the troublemakers to keep them separated could be prosecuted under a broad definition such as this. |
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Street youth are viewed by the police and the majority of society as delinquent troublemakers who have to be dealt with harshly or, conversely, completely ignored. |
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This was not a handful of troublemakers from the margins of society but workers who were uniting with the most representative waves of public opinion in their respective countries. |
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The Congolese consider Rwandan anyone who betrays, behaves aggressively or swindles relationships and community interests because for the Congolese, the Rwandans are harbingers of doom and troublemakers. |
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James saw Covenanters as troublemakers and initially tried to end their influence in Scotland. |
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Unrepentant troublemakers in small Haitian villages were sometimes dealt with by a shaman, who would prepare a powder from the skin of a blowfish mixed with ground glass. |
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Network administrators need to do more to prevent troublemakers from hijacking their hardware, quickly detecting when a botnet has enslaved their computers, and fixing DNS servers when their inherent flaws are exploited. |
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He was included in a group of troublemakers who were shipped temporarily to Oflag 64 in Schubin. |
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The current President of the Italian Republic, Giorgio Napolitano, appeared in the newspaper L'Unità condemning the revolutionaries as thugs and disreputable troublemakers. |
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In the centre of the country, people of the two faiths live side-by-side, and there are big minorities everywhere a scene providing ample tinder for troublemakers. |
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The troublemakers are not the familiar sort drunks jousting over a Rangers match or the 4.30 at Musselburgh but punters debating Scottish independence. |
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At the onset of the new millennium, we are living in a virtual coliseum, where exotic and nasty troublemakers can be killed not by lions but by the magical flying machines of the imperium. |
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When his workers rebelled, he temporarily shut steelworks, refused to rehire union members and brought in agents from Pinkertons to deal with troublemakers. |
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Prisoners included political troublemakers and individuals held at the request of their families, often to coerce a young member into obedience or to prevent a disreputable member from marring the family's name. |
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Headline-grabbing ideas such as stripping young troublemakers of their iPods and passports may sound tough to some, but how realistic will this really be? |
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The 35 troublemakers smashed windows and doors and upturned chairs. |
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The irony is that, while it is the Fed and FDIC that profess to be taking the closest look at this problem, it is the OCC that oversees most of the troublemakers. |
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The unlucky boy was hassled by a gang of troublemakers on his way home. |
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