Motorists who somehow believe fines will go away if they are ignored will regret their action when bailiffs come knocking at the door. |
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The court held that the statute did not invalidate the tenancy agreement but merely regulated its circumvention through the imposition of fines. |
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Under Home Office rules police could only plough back fines into road safety improvements if offenders were caught on cameras. |
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Conmen are attempting to make people cough up bogus traffic fines after they return from trips abroad. |
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The Court should have regard to any other fines or penalties suffered by the defendant for the misconduct in question. |
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They were forbidden to hear Mass, forced instead to attend Anglican services, with steep fines for those recusants who persistently refused. |
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Violations of the Stream Litter Act are heard in criminal court, and fines are levied by a judge. |
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Even so, this is a legal quagmire with the possibility of litigation or fines flying in all directions. |
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As part of the crackdown against absenteeism, the parents of persistent truants have been threatened with tougher fines and jail sentences. |
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Any opposition or infringement of the strict work rules resulted in fines which reduced their already minimal take-home pay. |
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The partnership is also funded through fines and helps to pay for its equipment, offices and staff. |
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Private companies will also be allowed to collect fines in areas where courts have been ineffective. |
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The WTO says that we are punishing the dumpers too severely by passing along those fines to the companies that are hurt in the first place. |
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This could include unlimited fines for directors and companies concerned and a public rebuke. |
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What should be done is use the money from the resulting fines to improve road safety conditions in these areas. |
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You may also be able to deal with the arrangements of fines with the distrainer. |
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Some states reacted to body snatchings by imposing prison sentences or heavy fines for grave robbing. |
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Pledges to join the European Community and replace short prison sentences with fines would leave modern Tories spitting blood. |
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King suggests that the imposition of fines on member states that are already struggling defeats the purpose. |
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Agroterrorism would be punishable by fines, imprisonment for up to life, and carry the death penalty in the most serious cases. |
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Similarly punitive measures like charging fines from the public for flouting rules can be introduced. |
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The memoirs note the nightly patrols by proctors searching for students, an offence liable to bring hefty fines and other impositions. |
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The dish was completed with a sieved hard-boiled egg, truffles and fines herbes. |
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Motorists parking illegally near the scene of a fatal accident face fines and penalty points as police in Accrington get tough on drivers. |
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We propose doubling fines for offences that cause accidents such as drunken driving and reckless driving. |
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Drivers can opt to take part in the scheme instead of paying fines and incurring penalty points on their licences. |
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A person found guilty in the District court faces fines of up to 1,900, up to three months in prison, or both. |
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One of the girls was adopted, but the rest of the family moved around a lot to avoid fines or sterilization. |
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Currently, fines of the High Court can be collected only by officers of the High Court. |
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The city has pursued fines or licence revocations for thousands of drivers. |
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They could end up facing an employment tribunal, or be hauled before a judge in a county court, with fines running into thousands of pounds. |
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The clay minerals and copious fines reported suggest that blockfields were produced by chemical weathering in a Mediterranean-type climate. |
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The product dries in 20 to 30 minutes to form a hard, durable surface that binds fines to the larger aggregate particles in the road surface. |
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Dry maintenance comprises the use of a grader only, to smooth the road by respreading the mixed fines and gravel material across the surface. |
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The government has moved away from compulsion towards economic incentives for couples who have only one child and fines for those who have more. |
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At the moment, the FCC reviews programmes only after it receives a complaint, imposing fines or censoring presenters after the event. |
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The financial guarantees and fines cited in the current law are from 1996, before the currency reforms of the Bulgarian lev. |
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In a report released here, the commission said such courts should be able to impose penalties such as fines and community service. |
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The commission has proposed no indecency fines during his five months in the chair. |
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If litterers don't pay their fines on time, they can be imprisoned for up to six months. |
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All the money collected in fixed penalty fines went to the authority administering the scheme, making it self-funding. |
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Discipline in junior soccer is strict, and the fines for breaches are penal. |
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Will I have to pay any special duties or fines before being cleared by customs at the airport? |
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It isn't and the claimed hypothecating of traffic fines revenue is just a political ruse. |
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German homeowners and gardeners who attempt to destroy an ant hill or subterranean nest will be subject to hefty fines if caught. |
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In 1973, when unions went on strike to protest falling real wages, the government outlawed strikes and imposed fines and prison sentences. |
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The new scheme will give head teachers the power to issue on-the-spot fines if a child is absent from school without permission. |
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We have to add the risk of fines or jail into our calculations, and this may tip the balance in favour of cooperating rather than defecting. |
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The statute did not expressly provide for cross-examination, nor did it impose penalties such as fines and imprisonment. |
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I still see a lot of people here using their phones normally here, but the fines are fairly stiff if you are caught. |
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The other thing I read this morning in the paper is they are doubling fines for expectorating. |
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The fines for not voting are small and often not enforced, and you can always cast a donkey vote anyway. |
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The league should be proud of that, not hiding behind stiff fines and harsh rhetoric. |
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Spitting in and littering of public places can be stopped by enforcing strict rules as well as fines and punishments. |
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The charter also granted one bailiff the powers of king's escheator, with any fines or revenues from escheated goods going towards the farm. |
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Nevertheless, the state exchequer still stands to gain from the fines collected by the police. |
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The government operated a strict code of behaviour, with hefty fines for anyone caught littering public places. |
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Operation Payback is a concerted drive to recover millions of pounds in unpaid fines owed by nonpayers in England and Wales. |
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The measure calls on the agricultural commissioner to impose fines on would-be violators. |
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Swindon Council has called in the bailiffs to sort out motorists dodging parking fines. |
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The main forms of corruption in the eyes of the locals are bribe-taking, a degenerate life-style and unreasonable fines inflicted on locals. |
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Reports are furnished through a carefully designed time system, with fines for non-compliance. |
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This is a directive issued by Carlow County Board to all clubs and will be strictly imposed resulting in fines for non-compliance. |
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Unlike in many other countries, Finnish traffic fines vary according to the offender's average income. |
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It is our job to deal with these pesky varmints and stick fines on their windscreens. |
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Mourners and newly-weds could face parking fines under new proposals for Otley town centre. |
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The new powers given to magistrates to deduct fines from wages and benefits are a useful tool. |
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No, even when indictments, charges and massive fines have been dished out, these people seem unable to admit they've done anything wrong. |
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They will be kept there until fines have been paid and if they are not they will be crushed. |
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A conman who poses as a policeman has been handing out fake speeding fines to unsuspecting motorists. |
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Estate agents who willfully underquote houses going to auction will apparently get big fines with a new investigation. |
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Old habits die hard, and I believe the heavy fines imposed can eventually turn out to be a blessing in disguise in two ways. |
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To deter illegitimate businesses from capitalizing on these advantages, Belize imposes heavy fines and imprisonment for money laundering. |
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A combination of persuasion and stiff fines may become necessary to discourage people from littering public places. |
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The State Department has issued dire warnings with threats of tens of thousands of dollars in fines. |
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Earlier this year Ottawa unveiled a draft law that proposed slapping fines on those possessing small amounts of the drug. |
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School chiefs in Swindon have been told to slap fines on parents or even put them in jail if their children play truant from school. |
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Then we arrive back at Aberdeen Airport and we're greeted by a sign warning that people who smoke risk fines or imprisonment. |
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The parking wardens have no problem and are very quick at slapping fines on people who park illegally around Portlaoise. |
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A spokesman for the court's fines office said they were unable to discuss details because of restrictions governing cases involving youths. |
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The Corporation is, in fact, contemplating of slapping fines on those who refuse to take up the rainwater harvesting. |
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If we dare to not be as accountable as they demand they will slap heavy fines on us. |
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The Labour MP has branded the fines dolled out for breach of disability laws as a mockery of the government's zero tolerance policy. |
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Following a complaint from a member of the public, the council has now decided to retract the fines as a goodwill gesture. |
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The provincial government is increasing fines and penalties for provincial offences, including speeding tickets, as of August 1st. |
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The proceeds from meters and fines currently go into public works such as footpaths, roads and drainage. |
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I hope they will choose to mend their ways rather than pay the fixed penalty fines that we will certainly impose. |
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If children are misbehaving, then we should put fixed fines on their parents. |
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North Yorkshire's trading standards have already prosecuted in four cases, which resulted in fines for breaching regulations. |
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Heavy fines are imposed on airlines, shippers and trucking companies found to be carrying stowaways, whilst border controls have been stepped up. |
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The taxpayer is exempt from late-payment penalties or fines for having sheltered income by moving cash out of the country. |
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Thus, they could avoid fines, whippings, imprisonment, or worse, the gallows! |
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After all, 148 speeding fines for just two hours' work is a nice little earner, isn't it? |
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But the system of fines does not seem to be eliminating the hazardous shellfish from the local market. |
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Around seven out of ten personal loans are paid off early, so watch out for loans that include hefty fines for early settlement. |
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He said the Council couldn't increase the level of fines imposed on people, who illegally dumped rubbish, as they were set down in legislation. |
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Web site tip-offs to the Business Software Alliance have led to heavy software piracy fines for two UK companies. |
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Keep an eye on your speedometer or set the cruise control on long trips to avoid going over the speed limit, thus avoiding costly fines. |
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In order to help out I moved from the fines court to the Magistrates Court next door and went up before the beak, or beakess on this occasion. |
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Drivers in the city who have not paid their parking fines had better beware. |
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More than a hundred fines have now been issued to people who drop litter or let their dogs foul the pavement in Sheffield. |
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The seaward walls of the bund will be lined with a plastic membrane layer to prevent any fines and turbid water moving through the sea wall. |
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Police have issued their first fines as part of a crackdown on illegal parking in Accrington. |
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All along the footpaths council signs threatened fines for skateboard riding and roller blading. |
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The principal change proposed in this legislation is to allow bailiffs to execute warrants to collect money owed by fines defaulters. |
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The fines can be issued anywhere in the borough but will be used mainly to tackle town centre disorder. |
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People who fly-tip should be hit in the pocket with fines or something like that, rather than everybody else having to suffer. |
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According to the provincial deputy director of traffic operations, fines between R1000 and R2500 were issued depending on magisterial districts. |
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On-the-spot fines will be introduced for minor offences, such as dropping litter or chewing gum, graffiti and fly-posting. |
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Despite new and improved laws, judicial proceedings remain slow and the fines actually imposed are light. |
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The deal helped Sotheby's repair its balance sheet, which had been dented badly by the fines and settlements after its price-fixing case. |
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Although the fines are not particularly onerous, the shame of being publicly labelled a flopper might be an effective deterrent. |
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The question is, can the federal courts come into the state of Alabama and threaten fines to release our inalienable rights? |
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Her timid reminders concerning the flight of time and consequent fines for lateness at work fell on deaf ears. |
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If a person is caught traveling above the average speed they will cop multiple fines and lose several more points. |
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Mr White said fines would continue to be issued regardless of a person's age. |
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The amendments also introduced the option of paying fines from 100 to 1000 leva instead of reformatory labour or imprisonment. |
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That's an individual rate of 200 fines annually per warden, which works out at just one successful fine per warden every 1.8 days. |
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They include on the spot fines for any pub, club or member of their bar staff knowingly serving alcohol to someone who is already drunk. |
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The get tough stance comes just a few weeks after parking attendants in the town were criticised for slapping fines on coaches picking up children from a Christmas pantomime. |
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In appropriate cases, company officers or directors should be liable to prosecution and, upon conviction, liable to fines or imprisonment. |
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In earlier times, the only type of iron ore marketed was lump ore, and the fines which were mined were considered waste materials. |
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Sintering is a process whereby iron ore fines are heated in a mixture of fluxes in order to agglomerate the particles into larger-sized pieces. |
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Thirdly, low quotas and the resultant extortionate fines are eating up the subsidies for the 1999 harvest. |
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The granite fines were a by-product of crushing syenite granite rock. |
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It has a much smaller particle size than ore fines and cannot be agglomerated by sintering. |
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No one has a problem with a large corporation paying fines if they cause substantial damage, but little people are getting caught up in the fervor too. |
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A mistake in classification can have a ripple effect on the fines your company may face. |
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Why has the rail regulator not safeguarded the public in respect of this and any other fines imposed on Network Rail? |
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If your company conducts telemarketing activity, you need to change your calling practices or risk costly fines for non-compliance. |
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Once the coarse material in a sample is screened from the fines a mechanical panning device can collect the heavy minerals. |
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You should be aware that the courts impose heavy fines or prison sentences on people who behave indecently. |
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Sexual activity and drug use are complex human behaviours highly resistant to blunt tools such as fines or imprisonment. |
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The NFL barred tweeting during games, a rule that Ochocinco has paid fines for breaking. |
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A 1791 law calls for whipping, jail time and ruinous fines for breaking the sixth commandment. |
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You can be fined for drinking in public, but the way in which such fines are implemented is a different story. |
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And hovering over them all is the constant threat of the police, who ticket the men tirelessly, leading to hundreds of dollars in fines and repeated stays in jail. |
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These offences are reprimanded with fines that are paid to the Treasury and of course fall into the hands of the state. |
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Nevertheless, in the wake of fines and legal fees related to the price-fixing probe, Christie's is proceeding with a number of serious belt-tightening measures. |
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I currently include £2.5bn for all tax and spectrum fines etc in India and therefore this outcome would be positive from a valuation perspective. |
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The proposed amendments to the Act will provide fines or penalties for trespass. |
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There are also differences in the harshness of penalties foreseen, which may be limited to fines in less serious cases. |
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Workers were subjected to fines of all sorts, which cut even further into their meager wages. |
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The purpose of these fines is to encourage parents to assume their educational and social responsibilities towards their children. |
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But she wonders if ministers quite understand the real world when she hears ideas such as head teachers' issuing fixed penalty notice fines to truants ' parents. |
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The responsibilities are arduous and trusteeship is a high-risk position which, if not conducted competently, can carry four-figure fines or even a prison sentence. |
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First, the quadrupling of fines for individuals, but the status quo for companies is of interest. |
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A barber has become so annoyed by mobile phone use in his shop that he has started issuing fines every time he hears a bleep or electronic jingle. |
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The court convicts the firms, sentences them to heavy fines and confiscates their assets. |
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In Burundi, Cameroon, Chad and DRC, journalists continue to risk long prison terms or bankrupting fines for covering corruption. |
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You're telling me that there may be instances here where there's a pollution problem, and yet no fines have been laid. |
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Under the Anglo-Saxons and the Normans, and throughout the Middle Ages, criminals were punished by fines and, for serious crime, death or mutilation. |
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The Health Secretary should stick to his guns here, while finding a way to reintroduce fines for overworking junior doctors. |
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The law also legitimates fines and imprisonment for anyone claiming land that is part of a plantation. |
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With civil actions, regulators can impose fines and force banks to overhaul their internal controls. |
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While a country could previously only retaliate by triggering a trade war, the WTO can now order fines to be paid. |
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A bit annoyed, I did fire off a letter to the mayor asking if he was behind the city's aggressive pursuit of fines and fees. |
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To date, a number of municipalities with idling control bylaws have issued no fines or summonses to enforce the law. |
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In addition, fines from its silica operation are beneficiated to flint glass-grade material. |
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Owing to such considerations, the percentage of sintered fines used in a blast furnace tends to vary from mill to mill. |
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Individuals responsible for the death of a woman from FGM can receive between five and twenty years of hard labor, and fines ranging between three and six million CFA francs. |
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Big fines ensure the prohibition aspect, which is absolutely necessary as DEC policemen are but 20 for the whole Big Apple? |
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Accordingly, America's trustbusters prefer to punish market riggers with fines and prison than with black ties and brandy. |
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Most got off with administrative fines rather than the 15-day jail sentences often doled out to those who stage illegal protests. |
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She said that the court system needs to be consistent regarding fines and jail sentences meted out for wildlife crimes. |
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Its income comes mainly from dues, but may also include raffles, increased meal costs, fines and auctions. |
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It can thus be compared to fines imposed for violation of criminally sanctioned provisions. |
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There are limitations and certain conditions for the success of this method such as uniformity of sand and fines content in addition to the time factor. |
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The Supreme Court held these fines could, consistent with the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, be imposed only if preceded by a criminal trial. |
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The restraining order is the first step toward possible contempt-of-court findings and heavy fines if the court finds the mechanics staged illegal job actions. |
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Several supermarkets and dairies owned up to fixing milk prices and agreed to pay fines of £116m, also last year. |
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They can't afford to pay, and before you know it the fines build up and they end up in prison. |
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This brings up questions about the relevance of using fines in cases of vehicle theft. |
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Penalties of fines or imprisonment may be imposed on those guilty of making such copies. |
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These fines will have no impact on Arkema's results taking into account both provisions already booked and the warranty agreed with Total. |
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Do you know what the fines are for distracted driving and the details of our child restraint laws? |
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Police officers and revenue inspectors issued 32 penalty fines for fare evasions after boarding buses stopping in London Road, Thornton Heath, last Wednesday. |
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The new legislatures promulgated the Black Codes in early 1866, which included anti-vagrancy laws, that threatened unemployed African-Americans with fines and imprisonment. |
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Police in the county now employ around 115 wardens to enforce traffic regulations along with officers, with fines going to central government funds. |
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The Accounting Office has said the failure to collect fines rebounded on victims, because compensation awards were not handed over until the cash had been brought in. |
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At the end of the day, have the wreckers remove the vehicles to a holding facility, where they are then collected after payment of the fines and wrecking fee. |
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The defendant eventually paid off his fines and in fact had secured reinstatement of his driver's license on the very day previous to the date of the accident. |
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It is an absurdly high level of fines and costs he has been landed with. |
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Such attacks normally took one of two forms, either that of prosecutions and fines at law for misfeasance, or the more drastic resort of attainder and forfeiture. |
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If convicted, the five suspects, including one from Taiwan, face jail terms of between 10 and 20 years and fines of up to 50 million riel, a deputy prosecutor said. |
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Police have defended a decision to launch a crackdown on litterbugs in Bradford after it was revealed they handed out just six on-the-spot fines in a fortnight. |
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Foreign lorry drivers who commit motoring offences in Britain face on-the-spot penalties under government plans to stop them avoiding fines by leaving the country. |
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The rumpus followed a majority vote of the finance ministers not to launch legal action which could have meant huge fines against Paris and Berlin. |
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The Sango people were discussing the fines they would exact and interrupted Mann's reproaches with whoops of Kawo! Kawo! in honour of their orisa. |
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More than 15,000 motorists in the Bradford area face tough fines and even having their vehicles crushed if they fail to tax their cars and lorries. |
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All the royal baggage and crown jewels and ordnance were captured and the Scots marauded the area from Boroughbridge to Beverley, demanding heavy fines or pillage. |
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On October 2011, the prefecture established an ordinance imposing fines and potential jail time. |
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He also did not receive a license in New York, and he received separate fines for tubing a horse and misusing lasix within the last three years of his practice. |
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These multi-million dollar fines are often factored in to the cost of doing business. |
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He says from now on they will not have to pay fines on their overdue library books, they cannot be arrested for being drunk and disorderly and they get free parking. |
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The concern is that the state could face large fines if licensed snarers inadvertently kill or harm threatened species such as Canada lynx or bald eagles. |
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Binge drinkers and booze-fuelled brawlers who plague Kingston town centre at night face on-the-spot fines in a police crackdown on loutish behaviour. |
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I turn now to the matter of fines for such things as wilful desertion, breaking lease, breaking the agreement, or failing to attend the tribunal or mediation. |
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The Commission has reduced the fines imposed in the past where participants in cartels have played a reduced role in relation to the hard-core members. |
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After getting no less than two fines and a stiff warning from the electoral committee, they were found to have gone over the allowed limit of their budget. |
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Violatiors will be penalised with fines of 20 000 to 120 000 leva. |
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The fines have already caused a backlash among some residents who fear they will be unfairly penalised for leaving their rubbish out for collection. |
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If your pet should wander off in search of a mate, you may be faced with paying fines and impoundment costs or worse should your pet be injured while roaming for a mate. |
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Failure to participate in tournaments of such magnitude at the eleventh hour, he added, would be costly as the organisers demand heavy fines for inconveniencing them. |
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The way that they seem to have got around this is by incorporating the fines component in the rules, which are in turn incorporated into the contract. |
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Expect piddling fines for players who will treat the loss as loose change and a couple of suspensions which will merely inconvenience coaches busy with their squad rotations. |
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Poor design of fire alarm systems can lead to increased nuisance alarm rates, increased maintenance costs, inoperability, and in some cases, fines. |
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Are we to assume that the money raised from parking fines is being put into an account that the owners, should they ever materialise, can have access to? |
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The province of Saskatchewan has in its code of laws no recourse for punishment of non-payment of fines other than to toss the offender into the pokey. |
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It also means that those not paying their fines will be dealt with in civil proceedings at the county court, rather than criminal proceedings in the magistrates court. |
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What galls him most, Boris says, is that he would gladly have worked off his fines through community service, but the city denied him this option. |
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Eighty-one of these fines, imposed under the Litter Pollution Act, were issued in the west of the county, while 51 were issued in the east of the county. |
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All uniformed Metro offices are empowered to issue traffic fines. |
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The Government must bring in tougher fines and give waste control agencies powers to move quickly against rogue dumpers, the Environmental Protection Agency said yesterday. |
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We impose fines of Rs 300 for refusals and charging excess fares. |
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On aver age, the kiosks receive a satisfaction rating of 95 percent even though most transactions involve taxes or fines. |
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It promises to increase fines and penalties for retailers who operate gas pumps that significantly shortchange consumers. |
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Where there is persistent nonobservance of the law, deterrent fines serve a legitimate purpose. |
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As for their edicts, the khaps, he said, issue fines or call for social boycotts, and also act as arbiters on local crimes. |
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In some cases, the incompliance with the law may imply the payment of fines. |
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People are not discouraged from rolling back odometers because the fines have been too low over the years. |
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Recruitment agencies that fail to satisfy these minimum standards can lose their licenses or face fines. |
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The pardoning power has come to embrace the authority to shorten prison terms and reduce fines. |
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For this reason, it is hard to say that the quantity of collected fines is a good measuring instrument. |
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Failure to comply with government regulations and rules can lead to criminal prosecution, fines, imprisonment or suspension and debarment. |
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This year Las Vegas entered what it calls drought alert, meaning tight restrictions on water use for residents and businesses and heavy fines for water wasters. |
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The government would have collected unpaid fines levied upon conviction in the same manner as a civil judgment. |
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There will also be higher fines for claimants who give inaccurate information on official forms. |
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Our by-law officer could verify and impose fines if an agreement is signed with our municipality authorizing him to do it. |
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The issue of unexecuted warrants and their associated dollar value is a topic that received considerable attention under the fines reform study. |
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If it is primarily intended to empty our jails of the people who fail to pay their fines then say so. |
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The latest fines in the softwood lumber agreement, and there are bound to be more, the taxpayers will pick up the tab. |
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I know of one automaker that actually fines its suppliers tens of thousands of dollars for every hour they're late delivering in a just-in-time environment. |
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These little white fibs give me an uneasy feeling, and I begin to wonder why the shop would lie, when I am here to help save them thousands of dollars in fines. |
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Further to the fines, a 16 foot wooden boat, motor and a seized catch of cod and mackerel were forfeited to the Crown. |
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Travellers who overstay their visa are subject to high fines and possible arrest. |
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Substantial fines are levied on those who overstay the period allowed by their visitor visa or residence permit. |
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The fines are backbreaking: the law is written in such a way as to drive anyone who is convicted into poverty. |
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Each of these offences, as well as incarceration for nonpayment of fines, will be discussed in greater detail. |
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Even if we include minimum fines, car thieves who do not have the means to buy a car will not have the means to pay the minimum fine. |
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Example 1: By-product carbon black fines from activated carbon process to be used as a substitute fuel in a cement kiln. |
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It would make sense to collude under those circumstances if the fines are going to be so trivial. |
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Harbour Grace: Convictions for overrunning crab and cod quotas have resulted in significant fines for east coast fishers. |
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It takes robust action when rules are broken, from fines to revoking broadcasters' licences. |
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Given the minor scale of the FCRA infringements, Greenpeace expected only raps on its knuckles or, at worst, a levy of small fines. |
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Don't ruin your holidays by accidents, heavy fines, impounding and driving bans. |
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Excellent cooling capacity, lubricity and effective settling and filtration of machining swarf and fines contribute to long tool life. |
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Bill 160 is an anti-labour and antidemocratic law and the Bouchard government, chose to brandish fines and penalties rather than negotiate. |
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Under the Norman and Angevin kings the pleas of the crown were noted by the sheriff and any fines due to the king from these offences were collected by him. |
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Scalping grizzlies are inclined slightly at 5°: reduced build up when feed is sticky and contains fines and also increase capacity. |
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Where the lord of the manor held a court leet, the jurisdiction of the hundred was exercised in that court, and the fines collected were payable to the lord. |
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Note concentration of rounded boulders on surface resulting from winnowing of fines by wave action. |
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Another law allowing adulterous wives to be jailed prescribes mere fines for errant husbands. Mr Yilmaz's cabinet, it is true, does not contain, as its piously Islamist-led predecessor did, a bigamist minister. |
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Under the F. T. C. settlement, which is preliminary and carries no financial penalties, the retailers will be subject to significant fines if they mislabel fur again in the next 20 years. |
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The fines immobilize water around them, so a lot of water is immobilized, not based only on the size of the particles but because of the nature of the clays, and so on. |
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Companies that exceeded their permitted amount would risk heavy fines. |
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Once the sentence has been served, a further period of imprisonment known as contrainte par corps, is imposed as a coercive measure aimed at eliciting payment of the fines. |
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The Regulation defines precise amounts of fines for each offence and there is no possibility for the control officer to consider any attenuating circumstances. |
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However, relatively few municipalities actively track complaints, or warnings, fines or summonses issued in relation to their idling control by-laws. |
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In August, Mr Hunt said that hospitals should operate pay-on-exit parking regimes – rather than pay and display for a fixed time period – and should waive fines if visitors or patients overstay through no fault of their own. |
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The sanctions for misbehaviour were not credible: to threaten a deficit-ridden country with huge fines is like chastising a man hanging on to a cliff by treading on his fingers. |
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In addition, the duration of the infringement has been reduced for Chinook and Bioproducts, as a result of which the imposition of fines is time barred. |
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If it does, people who warmed to the general concept of localism will start worrying about having to repair their own roads, and budding greens will object to swingeing fines for littering. |
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The trend towards aggressively prosecuting offending parties and imposing hefty fines to remove the profitability element of cartels and to serve as a deterrent to others is one that will undoubtedly continue. |
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Pursuing cartels has become a priority of the European Commission which seeks to inflict very substantial fines on enterprises which take part in them. |
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Top executives were jettisoned, huge fines imposed, and the pair were hit with portfolio caps and higher capital requirements. The journey to redemption has been backbreaking. |
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The French authorities have recovered £188m in taxes and fines from a list of 3,000 clients and Spain has recovered £220m, also from 3,000 clients. |
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We're one-third of the way through the season and we've had some suspensions, we've had some fines and we've had some game misconducts assessed that shouldn't have been game misconducts. |
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These laws were used shrewdly in levying fines upon those that he perceived as threats. |
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You will face fines or imprisonment, if convicted. |
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Corporate offenders who put toxic substances into water, which destroys fish habitats, should face stiff fines or even jail time if they are convicted. |
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As a result of its active pharmaceutical production activities, the Group may have risks related to accidental emissions or an industrial incident that could lead to damages, fines and operating losses. |
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Minor offenses are sanctioned with warnings, fines and seizure. |
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Performance data include information on the number of offence notices issued, the fines imposed, the number of trials held, and the number of French trials held. |
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One is the government coming down with new directives saying they must do this, that they must accomplish this amount of fines capture by this year to produce this kind of trafficable solid. |
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Ajinomoto, a Japanese food seasoning producer, has agreed to pay the United States Justice Department fines for conspiring to manipulate the price of a food flavor enhancer called nucleotides used in soups, sauces and spices. |
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The new rules introduce some fines for newly-defined transgressions — such as making aggressive or offensive remarks or gestures to other drivers and not belting up in the back seat. |
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The statutes forbade the damaging and cutting of both live and dead trees without a special authorisation from the authorities, and imposed very heavy fines for that time. |
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These gangs now control everyday life in many communities, imposing curfews, meting out fines and punishments, and deciding who will get work, housing, health care or education, and who will not. |
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The blend can also be enriched with a wide variety of flavourings: nuts, ham, olives, mushrooms, pepper, fines herbs, onions, eau de vie, seafood, meat etc. |
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Furthermore, the possibility that undertakings may have been required to pay damages in civil actions does not have any bearing on the fines to be imposed for infringing Community competition rules. |
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The initial phase beginning on Thursday introduces fines or jail terms for offences ranging from indecent behaviour, failure to attend Friday prayers, and out-of-wedlock pregnancies. |
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And fines for minimum wage underpayment must rise. |
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The Income Tax Act generally makes fines and penalties nondeductible. |
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In early February 2009, four newspaper editors who had been sentenced to jail in 2007 on charges of having libeled the state and the ruling National Democratic Party had their sentences commuted to fines. |
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And they want punitive damages to be treated the same as fines after convictions — as nondeductible expenses for companies that are forced to pay them. |
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The new law freed all slaves brought in illegally after its passage and imposed heavy fines on violators. |
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As she eventually allowed the prisoner to be freed, May avoided further sanctions including fines or imprisonment. |
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In reality, magistrates rarely impose the maximum fines allowed to them by law. |
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For example, in 2011, 48 people were imprisoned in England and Wales for defaulting on fines imposed for TV licence evasion. |
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The corresponding figures for 2007 were 5901 people prosecuted and 4,464 fines imposed. |
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They were able to impose tolls and fines on traders within a region outside their settlements. |
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Another situation where the murderer could be killed was when the murderer was at large and the fines had not been paid. |
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The two fines are apparently a compromise so that the murderer is both punished and forgiven. |
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Their robust attempts to enforce fines and collect debts generated much unpopularity among the lower classes. |
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The Roman Law lists various crimes as well as the fines associated with them. |
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The Russkaya Pravda confined punishments to fines and generally did not use capital punishment. |
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It is also interesting that all crimes committed against Romans had lesser fines than other social classes. |
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Both Grenada and Jamaica are considering increasing fines and jail time for the thefts. |
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These may result in fines and sometimes the loss of one's driver's license, but no jail time. |
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