A person is guilty of kidnapping in the second degree if he or she intentionally abducts another person under circumstances not amounting to kidnapping in the first degree. |
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However, in Sweden, for example, a parent having joint custody may be guilty of abduction, if he or she abducts the child from the other parent. |
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When a stranger abducts his younger brother, Matthew, the town rallies to find him, but to no avail. |
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A term of up to five years' imprisonment shall be imposed on anyone who abducts another person. |
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We also recognise the equally terrible situation in which the other parent, often the father, abducts the child and makes him or her untraceable. |
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At the wedding reception, a good friend abducts the bride and takes her off to a nearby pub. |
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Since this agenda has no public appeal, Kony abducts children to lead his war. |
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Every person who abducts a girl or woman by deception or violence for the purpose of marriage shall be liable to a term of imprisonment of three to nine years. |
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Article 477 of the same Code punishes any person who abducts a minor placed in his custody or from the premises where the minor has been placed by imprisonment for one month to one year and a fine of 200 to 1,000 dirhams. |
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Written in Cuba by the Canarian Silvestre de Balboa y Troya de Quesada, it is about the defeat of a French pirate who abducts a local ecclesiastic for ransom, and it reflects anti-Protestant fervour in the Spanish empire. |
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In Kyrgyzstan the practice of bride abduction, the act where a man abducts a girl in order to marry her, has been commonly justified as a 'tradition' for centuries. |
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More specifically, the Magisterium abducts young children and literally kills their souls, thereby extinguishing the spirit of free thought and inquiry. |
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