To be admissible, this interpretation must also cohere with our current philosophical and scientific theories about the subject in question. |
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In all such instances, after due consideration I was satisfied that the evidence was relevant and admissible. |
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For any proposed fresh evidence to be admissible the following four criteria must be satisfied. |
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That being so, the finding by the trial judge that the accused was guilty of the offence was not supported by admissible evidence. |
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In China, private detectives are not allowed to testify in court, and tape-recorded evidence is not admissible. |
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The onus is now on legal council to establish evidence that is admissible in court of noncompliance on the part of the debtors. |
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His qualifications were called into question, but I accept he had admissible evidence to give. |
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Like, for example, her previous sexual relations with other men probably would not be admissible in a court of law. |
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Further the opinion evidence now tendered relies upon factual statements which are still not supported by any admissible evidence. |
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The Attorney-General says any confession extracted using torture would not be admissible in an Australian court. |
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I doubt very much that such evidence would be admissible in an Australian court. |
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The rules of the commission provided more room to maneuver and allowed for a broader range of admissible evidence. |
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Whether such a statement is admissible as evidence is a matter for the courts to decide. |
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Your testimony and the expert opinion you offer must be connected to the facts already established by admissible evidence. |
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Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. |
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The answer to this question depends on what evidence was properly admissible at the trial. |
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A software legal advisor makes sure the evidence is admissible, convincing and legally obtained. |
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In R v. Abbey, the Court held that an expert opinion based on inadmissible hearsay evidence is admissible, provided it is relevant. |
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Since the action is therefore admissible, the objection of inadmissibility raised by the Council and the Commission must be dismissed. |
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Their main task was game keeping, restoration of the game populations and reaching of admissible reserves of the separate types of game. |
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Evidence of this nature is admissible to show what the parties had in mind, however indeterminately, with regard to the basis of remuneration. |
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For the Crown it is argued that this evidence was admissible but not as evidence of similar facts. |
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All academic documents show the student admissible except for language proficiency. |
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There is no merit in this claim of deficiency, on the evidence properly admissible before me. |
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They enable the court to control the evidence by excluding evidence otherwise admissible and limiting cross-examination. |
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It is likely that the court will accept that this evidence is admissible, since the strict common law rule is generally ignored. |
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I was pleased that the bill enunciates the principle that all relevant evidence is admissible unless there is a policy reason to exclude it. |
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The new Criminal Justice Bill would make hear-say evidence more readily admissible in court. |
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Legally privileged information obtained by a source is extremely unlikely ever to be admissible as evidence in criminal proceedings. |
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The British government wants to make them admissible evidence in British courts. |
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A major aspect of the application is whether the averments in the statements of case are true, an issue on which hearsay evidence is admissible in the action itself. |
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There's a specific code section that says polygraphs aren't admissible. |
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Their eye-witness accounts were not admissible in court as evidence. |
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Were there no limits to what was admissible in a house of prayer for all people? |
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While that is hearsay evidence and not admissible to prove that the accident did occur at that time, it is admissible evidence relevant to the state of mind of the declarant. |
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The fact of the matter is: if it is not admissible, it does not even get put on the weighing machine. |
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The payment request shall not be admissible if at least one essential requirement is not met. |
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Production aids should be admissible if they do not involve any restrictions on journalistic or artistic freedom of expression. |
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Accordingly, the results of polygraph tests are not always admissible in judicial proceedings. |
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Rulings like today's about what statements are admissible at trial are rarely appealable. |
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The court was left with no admissible evidence on this point. |
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This information will be admissible as evidence in the court of law. |
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The President's ruling is that the form of words in the erratum is in accordance with the Rules of Procedure and is therefore admissible. |
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In Portugal, video-linked testimonies or statements are admissible upon request by the public prosecutor, the defendant or the witness. |
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In December 2008, the Court of Appeal ruled that the recantations of the complainant were admissible as fresh evidence. |
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Evidence of the commission of the offences with which he was charged was, of course, admissible at the trial of the charges in the indictment on which he was arraigned. |
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This appeal is not de novo, meaning that only the evidence examined by the citizenship judge is admissible in court. |
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The judge or clerk examines the request for a revocation and decides if it is admissible. |
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When consideration of an admissible petition has been concluded, it shall be declared closed and the petitioner informed. |
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A petitioner should not have to wait years to know whether a petition is admissible. |
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While hearsay has become admissible in court, free speech is being patrolled by officious use of public order laws. |
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The application shall only be admissible within the year immediately following the expiry of the unobserved time limit. |
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Furthermore, even evidence extracted through torture might have been admissible. |
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They put forward three or four other admissible amendments that simply make corrections to the text. |
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Although her petition is admissible, Parliament has so far refused to hear her. |
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Moreover, where a risk of decommitment is invoked, applications for payment should also be admissible by the end of the quarter concerned. |
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Some of them were not admissible at that time because of the difficulty of understanding the regulations. |
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All procedural details to be followed for obtaining admissible evidence were clearly set out. |
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Approximately a quarter of all British tap water contains pesticides at levels above maximum admissible concentration set by the EC for our safety. |
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And for Sarkozy, whether his presidential diaries are admissible as evidence or protected by his presidential immunity is key. |
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If somehow the Tsarnaev brothers were detected by a drone, would that be admissible in court? |
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Such statements are often admissible under exceptions to the law that otherwise forbids the use of hearsay at trial. |
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The principal task of the courts will continue to be to ensure that, whatever the range of admissible evidence, coincidence is not confused with proof. |
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However, the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada limit the number of students admissible without a first degree to 10 percent. |
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The errors are patent and they are explicable by what we say is a rather shallow analysis of the admissible value of those utterances in the record of interview. |
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That presupposes that only positive photo identification is admissible. |
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It follows that the principle as enunciated in Sharp is that both the inculpatory and exculpatory parts of a mixed statement are admissible as evidence of their truth. |
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Corporal punishment is admissible as part of the pedagogy and a way to learn about authority: in fact whippings and other bad treatment are frequent. |
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Apart from the offences committed in flagrante delicto, the detention requires a warrant from a judge or, when pre-trial detention is admissible, from the Procuratorate. |
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So there is a Schnorr random sequence that does not have invariant subsequence frequencies under admissible place selections, and is therefore susceptible to exploitation by a gambling system. |
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After expiry of the period of ten days to make an objection, the claims declared admissible which are uncontested shall be definitively admitted in the reports signed by the liquidators and the official receiver. |
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In the cases provided for by Article 36, service shall be effected as soon as the application has been put in order or, failing that, as soon as the Tribunal has declared it admissible. |
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We have already identified various groups of colleagues whose appeals would be admissible and who should therefore contact us in order to draft a request or complaint. |
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The Committee shall decide as soon as possible and in accordance with the following rules whether the communication is admissible or is inadmissible under the Optional Protocol. |
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If appeals to irrationality are admissible, then anything goes. |
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The request for continuation of proceedings shall be admissible only if it is presented within two months following the expiry of the unobserved time limit. |
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Such a transfer of the majority of the voting rights to a new buyer will be admissible only if in the tender procedure no offer is made for the full divesture of one or more segmented business areas. |
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Caramel and treacle are admissible by-flavours. |
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The story said the panel found the science behind polygraphs dubious and noted that a polygraph test is not admissible in court as evidence. |
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However, the draft directive would not increase the hourly amount of admissible advertising and it would continue to limit possible interruptions for cinematographic works, television films and news programmes. |
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This allowed circumstantial evidence to be admissible, but also forced the captured to be transferred to England where the law was enforceable. |
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The German Basic Law provides that no amendment is admissible at all that would abolish the federal system. |
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In every jurisdiction based on the English common law tradition, evidence must conform to a number of rules and restrictions to be admissible. |
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Evidence from a criminal trial is generally admissible as evidence in a civil action about the same matter. |
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About one out of every twenty cases submitted to the court is considered admissible. |
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The rules proscribe that certain testimony may not be admissible for one purpose, but may be admissible for another. |
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However such evidence may be admissible if the defense has argued the defendant had no knowledge driving impaired was a crime. |
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If the appeal is admissible and well founded, the Court of Justice sets aside the judgment of the General Court. |
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Fair Defence barrister Martin Steen said if probation officers are allowed to use polygraphs they should also be admissible evidence. |
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The first is the evidential test where we have to be satisfied there is enough admissible evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction. |
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The fact that Ptolemy did not represent an eastern coast of Asia made it admissible for Behaim to extend that continent far to the east. |
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Consequently, after the decision on the confirmation of charges is filed with the Registry, a case must be considered admissible unless breach of the ne bis in idem principle is alleged. |
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Trial judges should contextualize this instruction by identifying the witness who has just or will give evidence of an utterance or statement of one accused that is not admissible in relation to any other. |
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On January 10, 2010, the Minister asked the Alberta Court of Appeal to decide whether the complainant's recantation was admissible as fresh evidence on appeal and if so, to hear the case as a new appeal. |
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However, unlike an appellate court, the Minister need not bifurcate his decision making process by first determining whether evidence is admissible in a court of law and then determining the result. |
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In September 2007, the Minister asked the Alberta Court of Appeal to determine whether the complainant's recantations would be admissible as fresh evidence, and if so, to hear the case as an appeal. |
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Referring to question 2, he said that, in accordance with article 6 of the Bulgarian Constitution, all citizens were equal before the law, and neither abridgement of rights nor any privileges were admissible. |
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Attenuation must not exceed 45 dB at any point of the overall system, i.e. a maximum of 45 dB is admissible from the camera branch to the most distant user. |
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The only incidental matters admissible in this type of proceeding shall be those that are moved by way of exceptions for an extemporaneous action, res judicata and the lapse of claims. |
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National security is hardly ever at stake in disciplinary proceedings, as a result of which it is not admissible to exclude the public altogether. |
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However, initially the Commission will only consider requests admissible if they are confirmed in writing with a paper copy of the requesting party's identity document. |
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Responsible border management means making it easy for legitimate goods and admissible people to enter Canada while keeping out illegal or restricted goods and inadmissible people. |
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Their role is not to win convictions at any cost but to put before the court all available, relevant, and admissible evidence necessary to enable the court to determine the guilt or innocence of the accused. |
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Before the grievance could be heard on its merits, the adjudicator had to determine whether the videotaped surveillance would be admissible as evidence. |
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We would like to see new technology for admissible evidence that is easier to use than blood sampling, as we have seen with breathalyzer devices over the years. |
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Evidence that is independently admissible or discoverable in any arbitral or judicial proceeding shall not be rendered inadmissible or non-discoverable by virtue of its use in mediation proceedings. |
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A complaint will only be admissible if the incriminating facts date from less than one year from the day of the plaintiff's taking cognize of the case. |
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He made a claim that was very politically admissible at the international level: Aceh was an independent state prior to colonisation, and the Acehnese had not been consulted about their incorporation into Indonesia. |
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Part I offers revealing examples of apparently incompatible interpretations and, in the spirit of multiplism, offers several strategies for rendering them admissible. |
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Garcia, against the statement of the chairman of the adjudicatory chamber of the independent ethics committee, Hans-Joachim Eckert, is not admissible. |
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A child under seven years of age is conclusively presumed to be incapable of either murder or manslaughter, no evidence of capacity being admissible. |
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If the Court decides it has jurisdiction and the case is admissible, the respondent then is required to file a Memorial addressing the merits of the applicant's claim. |
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The judge decided that the confession was admissible in court. |
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