Maybe we ought to trust them more than we do to judge the case that was presented in court. |
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The jury has been warned to judge the case only on the evidence heard in court, and not on any of the surrounding publicity. |
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The judge is bound to endeavor to judge each case on the basis of the codified law. |
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What we have here in Aruba are professional judges, and it will be a single judge who in the first instance will judge the case. |
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He has also had the honour of being asked to judge numerous competitions at regional and national levels. |
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Mr. Quinn asked me to judge the competition, but I'd rather let the audience decide the winner. |
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I'm sorry, but your mother and I have to go to Tokyo to judge the country competition. |
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Equally disturbing to many, Parliament routed execution of these new laws through admiralty courts, where a judge would preside. |
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As quickly as he had jumped to judge Tyler, Jon was learning to have pity for him. |
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If the violators choose deferred adjudication, the judge typically increases the length of deferral by several months. |
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I'd say it's the best thing on TV now, but I don't watch enough TV to judge the competition. |
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Five nurses were attacked when a man went on the rampage through a South Yorkshire hospital, a judge heard. |
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The trial judge advocate prosecuted the case with the aid of one assistant. |
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I spent 28 years as a Navy judge advocate so I am well familiar with what they do. |
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For one thing, a judge of the Allahabad High Court wanted to use archaeology as a means to adjudicate upon a dispute concerning property rights. |
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The family has been adjudged to be guilty of a crime by association, with the newspaper columnists acting as judge and jury. |
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But then you have a decision and a judgment of a single judge of the Federal Court. |
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For example, pretty much everyone agrees that a judge should not sit in judgment in a case on appeal if he participated in the decision below. |
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Who would like a part-time, non-committed judge to sit in judgement on a particular case, if one were a litigant? |
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On Monday, the judge who signed the warrants is expected to appoint public defenders for each of the accused. |
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These analysts, the judge observed, always choose a wrong timing and usually comment on matters which were sub judice before the court. |
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However a judge had to adjourn passing sentence because the defendant must be returned to prison to finish an earlier sentence. |
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Rather, the motions judge exercised his discretion judicially on proper principles. |
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As far as I can judge he sees nothing abnormal or peculiar about any part of this routine. |
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The first was unrecorded and the trial judge refused to allow it to be admitted into evidence. |
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This is an accident waiting to happen and if this dog does attack a child then I hope the judge can live with his decision. |
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If, or when, the technique is widely accepted, a judge may have to decide whether to admit test results as evidence. |
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This book defies the old adage that claims you can't judge a book by its cover. |
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Chances are that the washerwoman did not have a judge for a husband or father. |
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A judge heard the property was in a bad state of repair but the owners wanted to retain it as a storehouse or wash house. |
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To judge by the data collected in 1929, fruit jobber businesses ranged widely in both size and clientele. |
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They seemed all right at first but I suppose you can't judge a book by its cover. |
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And I think that, like this movie says, you can't judge a book by its cover. |
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Two of the four accused were dismissed early in the trial after the judge found her to be unreliable. |
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They only have jazzed-up previews by which to judge whether to see a movie, and they've been burned enough that they're cynical. |
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To both her credit and her detriment, Nora has learned to not be quick to judge people. |
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This inability of a provincial court judge to put public safety above the comforts of the criminal is unacceptable. |
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One is that the trial judge was wrong to admit a series of evidence including a taped police interview with him. |
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Instead, the judge can admit evidence such as statements made to the police by witnesses. |
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This was just another thing that contributed to the fact you can't judge a book by its cover. |
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A judge has ordered the 30 caravans to quit the county council-owned land near Southampton by Friday. |
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Earlier this week a judge at Southampton County Court ordered that the travellers should quit the site by yesterday. |
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As well as affecting the way we judge other people, moods also influence our susceptibility to weak arguments. |
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The deputy judge quoted extensively from the speeches of Lord Nicholls and Lord Hoffmann. |
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The judge then considered and quoted at length from the cross-examination of Mr Kirkland. |
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Nine months after his conviction, however, an appeals judge acquitted him of all charges. |
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They must get a signed warrant from a judge before sending law-enforcement officers after the absconder. |
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It was impossible to judge the Germans on their walloping of hapless Saudi Arabia. |
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Witty and polished, the film takes a jocular view of the characters and their failings but doesn't judge events. |
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Under the actual facts of the case, the Court found that the judge had taken no actions of any significance. |
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The judge bought the excuse though and sent him packing with nothing but a warning. |
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As one who abominates everything the Third Reich stood for, I could not bring myself to judge her. |
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We leave the discerning readers to judge by themselves, the real ramifications of the issue. |
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We expect judges to place their personal and political feelings aside when they judge a case. |
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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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His case will be heard by a three-member disciplinary commission, which will judge the case and assess the penalty. |
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Before taking his own life, the gunman wrote that the judge had abused her judicial power in dismissing his medical malpractice case. |
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But did he stay where he was and wait for the judge to give him a free lift in a police car courtesy of a bench warrant? |
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Critics are frequently invited to review or judge the competition, which culminates in Edinburgh after nationwide heats. |
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Either the judge read this carefully and thinks the order is well-founded, in which case he isn't a very smart judge. |
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Despite the admonition that you can't judge a book by its cover, I tend to find that, increasingly, you can. |
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That does not make sense, that is not logical, and the judge has abused his powers. |
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Counsel gave another reason for adducing the evidence which it appears the judge did not accept. |
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Wine lovers tend to judge the quality of a wine region by the reputation of its well-known wines. |
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I'm not sure that my knowledge of economic theories qualifies me to judge his arguments, but it does make for some food for thought. |
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The judge said Vetch had abused the trust of those who had given him a free hand to run their financial affairs. |
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Indictable offences are more serious and are tried in the Crown Court before a judge and jury. |
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Murphy said the judge had not abused the legal process, but should not have dealt with the case in the way he did. |
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Concurrency had never been in issue before the sentencing judge in the County Court. |
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It is submitted for the Attorney General that the judge was wrong in both respects. |
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Let us judge whether people are fit to represent us, not these unelected, unaccountable standards quangos, committees and commissioners. |
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Each country selects a judge for the panel which visited all the competitors during the summer. |
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I will be the judge overseeing this competition, and the best part is that you can play along! |
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A hard working man, he had a fine knowledge of the land and was a good judge of livestock. |
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He had always been a good judge of character, and was always big on first impressions. |
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The judge said that police found 35.2g cannabis, evidence of his attempts at drug horticulture and a quantity of money when they raided his home. |
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Three years after an Environment Court judge ordered a Pauatahanui quarry closed its owners are seeking to reopen it. |
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He said he was not a good judge of how attractive the building is but thought it should be preserved for historical reasons. |
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He begins his new role with, seemingly, the priceless advantage of being a good judge of a player. |
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He's got a great sense of humor, and I think he's quite a good judge of people. |
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A scratch golfer who mixes freely with professionals in that game, McGwire is a good judge of what he sees and hears around the circuit. |
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You're a good judge of character and appreciate honesty, but don't encounter it very often. |
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Clearly she is an experienced politician and probably a good judge of these matters. |
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Although he has interviewed so many world figures, when asked if he is a good judge of character he says he's not as good as Carina. |
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You're a good judge of character, so hang back and observe the players before committing to a course of action. |
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He was well known at cattle marts and was considered a good judge of cattle. |
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He has moulded a solid, if unspectacular side and his signings have shown him to be a good judge of player. |
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Jimmy was an able judge of stock and could measure up an animal in quick time. |
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He seemed like a really nice guy, but then again that didn't necessarily mean he was a good judge of character. |
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If you put some effort into your clothes, some people may judge you to be frivolous, while others will treat you with greater respect. |
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Tommy is also a suspect in a series of bombings in the capital and in the murder of a judge who sentenced him. |
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Why is it that people in this state are so quick to judge someone strictly on their accent? |
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You have to judge the situation to determine which course of action to take. |
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However, the FSCS takes a more stringent view and must judge cases on strictly legal liability. |
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They don't want to rake over old coals or engage in mudslinging but they stand by their investigation and are quite happy for work to be looked at and let the public judge it. |
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But you can't judge a book by its cover or whatever they say. |
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Mind you, you can't judge a book by its cover, me old mum used to say. |
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Never thrusting himself upon the crowd, but quietly allowing people to find him, he had a confidence in his own ability to judge who and what he wants out of every situation. |
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Why shouldn't he when the judge was so obviously abusing his authority? |
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The judge asks him if he can think of any reason he shouldn't be shipped off to prison and if there's anyone out there who cares about a washed-up has-been. |
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The Speaker cannot do that, or judge the quality or accuracy of an answer. |
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However, only days before early voting was to commence, a local judge ordered the polling station open. |
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The commotion gradually quiets down and the judge looks at the jury. |
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A judge will now decide whether Vannoni should face a criminal trial, or if his work gets validated in a clinical trial. |
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What we must try to do is to judge the overall effect on balance. |
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For example, it would predict that women would suffer subjective biases in blind experiments where people are asked to judge work by men and women. |
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A judge there would have wide latitude in sentencing and could send the colonel to prison. |
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The trial judge and the Crown Prosecutor were both of the opinion, after all the evidence and all the addresses, that the issue was alive for the jury's consideration. |
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The judge held that it was in effect a disgraceful piece of journalism. |
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Nonetheless, the judge did not send Batista to jail, ordering him instead to perform two years of community service. |
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What competent judge in the world would tolerate such open displays of defiance? |
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That was decided by the judge who rejected the appellants' evidence. |
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He thought of the judge from the law courts, but didn't say anything. |
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He was an able judge of stock and had friends all over the region. |
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He had a great attachment to the soil and was a good judge of stock. |
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It upsets me that people who don't know him personally can judge him. |
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The judge warned the duo they must not assume the fact he had adjourned sentence for pre-sentence reports meant he was in any way indicating what penalty would follow. |
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The judge offered to adjourn sentence to allow the defendant to be with his daughter during that time, but he opted for his case to be dealt with. |
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The reason for the decision was chiefly the judge advocate's failure to direct the jury clearly that a mistaken belief in consent would provide a defence. |
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But he was filmed helping to judge a skateboarding competition. |
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Members of the Panel of Chefs of Ireland will judge the competition. |
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The People's Court must be supported to judge these cases fairly. |
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The judge ruled that the doctor's actions were in breach of her contractual duty. |
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The judge excused herself from the case to avoid any appearance of impropriety. |
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The judge ruled that the prejudicial effect of the evidence outweighed its value. |
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On Feb. 1, 2008, a Los Angeles probate judge granted the conservatorship and issued a restraining order against Lutfi. |
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Later, a Riverside judge ruled that Mills would remain as the conservator of her estate. |
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His wife, Anna Zubkova, is running as a Democrat for a probate judge seat in Plainfield, Conn. |
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This month a judge intervened and granted a 30-day temporary stay on police action against Abbott. |
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The judge said no, and her ruling was affirmed by a decision from a First Circuit appellate court. |
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Meanwhile, almost exactly 30 years after the trial, the judge left his home to board a steamboat and was never heard from again. |
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The judge said the right to not be discriminated against under the First and Fourteenth amendments applies to the plaintiffs. |
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During his appearance, Morsi angrily asked the presiding judge why he was on trial. |
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The arraignment concluded as usual, with the exception of the judge inquiring about classified material. |
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Such a committee can judge people in full, not as an atomistic collection of receipts and isolated life events. |
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On December 16th, the journalist Barrett Brown will be sentenced before a judge in Dallas, Texas. |
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In beige socks and black flip-flops, the man accused of bombing two U.S. embassies faced a judge in Manhattan. |
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The judge said the royalty payment did not require him to recuse himself, according to 10th Circuit Clerk of Court Betsy Shumaker. |
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To judge from the book review sections lately, another thousand or so are being published to coincide with the bicentennial. |
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When it was all over and the family members had spoken, bulger was asked by the judge if he wanted to make a statement. |
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After all, there will always be a bureaucrat, politician, or judge eager to set the limits on what is unacceptably offensive. |
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Yet I doubt that she will become a capacious judge with wide-ranging interests and intense curiosity. |
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The seniority of the judge depends on the seriousness and complexity of the case. |
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In June 2017, a mistrial was declared and a new trial ordered after the judge was appointed to the Ontario Superior Court and lost jurisdiction. |
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To judge from the photos Gerald's hippy phase had reached its counter-cultural extreme in a pair of mutton-chop whiskers and a floral tie. |
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A judge denied them this option, but allowed them to win compensation from the act of the studio ignoring the contract itself. |
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Shortly afterwards, one of the jurors sent a note to the judge and was discharged. |
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If endorsed, the President appoints the candidate as a judge of the Constitutional Court. |
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The Lord President is the most senior judge of the Court of Session, and is also president of the 1st Division of the Inner House. |
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The Lord Justice General is the most senior judge of the High Court of Justiciary. |
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He also proposed that a British judge of the High Court be appointed as the chairman of the Commission. |
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Essentially, the judge or jury is unconvinced that the suspect is innocent, but has insufficient evidence to the contrary. |
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I think it's time we now have a proper, public debate so that the public can listen to the two sides of the argument and judge from themselves. |
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Defoe was found guilty after a trial at the Old Bailey in front of the notoriously sadistic judge Salathiel Lovell. |
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Swift, normally a harsh judge of human nature, said that all that was good and amiable in mankind had died with Temple. |
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The motion was heard on 18 April 1958 by the judge who had committed Pound to St Elizabeths. |
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In Scotland, Lord Lyon King of Arms is the judge of the Lyon Court, which has jurisdiction over all heraldic matters. |
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After submitting briefs, parties often have the opportunity to present an oral argument to a judge or panel of judges. |
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The judge granted both the conservatorship and the restraining order. |
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The Lord Lyon King of Arms is the chief heraldic officer of Scotland and Great Officer of State and a judge in the judiciary of Scotland. |
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Sgt. White asks the judge to authorize a nightcapped warrant because there is a considerable risk to the officers executing the search warrant. |
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Finally, the Lord Lyon King of Arms is the sole judge in the Lyon Court, which determines cases relating to heraldry. |
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The Herald described Boyle's story as a modern parable and a rebuke to people's tendency to judge others based on their physical appearance. |
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It is clear, however, that a king had to judge in accordance with the laws. |
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It was possible to appeal against a judge's decision, and the apellant could demand that the judge show the authority of a book for his judgment. |
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This method allows electors to judge every single candidate as in a FPTP system. |
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Most matters are decided by a district judge or circuit judge sitting alone. |
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Truman was county judge of Jackson County, Missouri in the 1930s, an executive position rather than a judicial post. |
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As a result, the judge ruled that the defendants could not receive a fair trial and all 14 were acquitted. |
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They are trials in the full judicial sense, presided over by a judge with an expert jury of assayers. |
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He was a religious cleric and judge who was invited to come to Saada from Medina to arbitrate tribal disputes. |
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After testimonies from the other two emigrants who travelled with Davies and Welsh, the judge found in favour of Welsh. |
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After his death King Minos became a judge of the dead in Hades, while Rhadamanthys became the ruler of the Elysian fields. |
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Should a judge die in office, the practice has generally been to elect a judge in a special election to complete the term. |
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The exception was China, which did not have a judge on the Court from 1967 to 1985 because it did not put forward a candidate. |
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A judge can be dismissed only by a unanimous vote of the other members of the Court. |
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The line judge signalled the ball was in, but this was overruled by the umpire. |
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If a swimmer kicks up his heels and splashes the water, the judge will take points off accordingly. |
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The shape of the underwater portion can be difficult to judge by looking at the portion above the surface. |
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A man who is no judge of law may be a good judge of poetry, or eloquence, or of the merits of a painting. |
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They say he is a poor judge of character considering all the unreliable friends he has made. |
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The trial judge said Sutcliffe was beyond redemption, and hoped he would never leave prison. |
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Historians judge differently the sources for the history of Sweden's consolidation. |
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The judge asserted that Mr Brown killed his victim in defense, and not maliciously. |
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Maliki Muslims requested Ibn Battuta serve as their religious judge as he was from an area where it was practised. |
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Popular and shallow-headed mindes, cannot perceive the grace or comelinesse, nor judge of a smooth and quaint discourse. |
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For sometimes the king himself was also the highest judge who judged and punished important criminals such as traitors or rebels. |
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Remembering the fate of Tome Pires decades earlier, Macau's leaders chose an elderly judge and Italian Jesuit to go in their place. |
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It is harder to judge the contribution of women to research, as the data for 2013 only cover the higher education sector. |
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The resurrection established Jesus as the powerful Son of God and is cited as proof that God will judge the world in righteousness. |
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A report handed to a Spanish judge investigating the tragedy revealed the star suffered from atheromatosis, a thickening of the arteries. |
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Sports such as polo do not judge the horse itself, but rather use the horse as a partner for human competitors as a necessary part of the game. |
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The judge gave his sentence orally in Norman, which was then written in Latin. |
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The judge thought that she died miserably, so he gave her precious Yin-yang fan to save Mr Pei in the human world. |
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He denied the ecclesiastical hierarchy any right to judge on matters of church order because of its corrupted state. |
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The judge gave him ten days to put his affairs in order before beginning his sentence. |
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They don't know I wasn't allowed to have any of my witnesses come in or that the judge in my case was a rape shield advocate. |
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On this subject We judge it Our duty to rectify an attitude with which you are doubtless familiar, Venerable Brethren. |
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This helps the judge decide the track to which the case should be allocated. |
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There may be a paper adjudication if the judge thinks it appropriate and the parties agree. |
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A judge is a person who presides over court proceedings, either alone or as a part of a panel of judges. |
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The judge is supposed to conduct the trial impartially and, typically, in an open court. |
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In inquisitorial systems of criminal investigation, a judge might also be an examining magistrate. |
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The ultimate task of a judge is to settle a legal dispute in a final and public manner, and thus affirm the rule of law. |
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The main factfinder is the jury, and the judge will then finalize sentencing. |
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In the High Court, the abbreviation JA is used to denote a justice of appeal, and the letter J refers to a judge of the Court of First Instance. |
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In Italy, the presiding judge of a court is addressed as Signor presidente della corte. |
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The judge was told by the accused that his friends had to incite him to commit the crime. |
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The trial judge has always been expected to make a recommended minimum term. |
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The judge ruled that Denny's statement had indeed meant this, and from this position of strength Coke forced a settlement. |
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Before long, the judge asked the bailiff to remove him, Cooley said. |
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So the negligence as pleaded and as found by the judge did not relate to the fact that the terminal bonuses were not guaranteed. |
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The judge directed the jury that his drunkenness was irrelevant unless he was so drunk as to be incapable of knowing what he was doing. |
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The judge dismissed the evidence of bruising to a fellow soldier's leg as a fabrication to suggest injury to that soldier from the car. |
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The judge at first instance refused to leave the defence of medical necessity to the jury so the defendant changed his plea to guilty. |
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As a matter of law, the judge would then decide whether to leave the defence to the jury. |
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He is a judge of one of those courts, where matrimonial causes are conusable. |
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Sachdeva and were edited by Mr Paul H Niekirk and the Hon Mr Justice Richard Kuloba, a judge of the High Court of Kenya. |
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Whether or not the Cour d'assisess, whose task was to judge severe crimes, were to operate with a jury was a topic of considerable controversy. |
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Some special courts were created to judge of criminals who could intimidate the jury. |
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Some orders, however, are spoken orally by the judge in open court, and are only reduced to writing in the transcript of the proceedings. |
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Especially on the United States frontier, a judge might travel on horseback along with a group of lawyers. |
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The judge decided that the confession was admissible in court. |
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The trial judge Lord Woolman comes in for stinging criticism, too, for failing to give proper advice to the jury. |
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Gorsuch had a track record as a reliably conservative judge in the 10th circuit. |
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A circuit justice may sit as a judge on the Court of Appeals of that circuit, but over the past hundred years, this has rarely occurred. |
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A circuit justice sitting with the Court of Appeals has seniority over the chief judge of the circuit. |
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It is a risky test because it involves the opinion of either the judge or the jury that can be based on limited facts. |
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Judicial councils consist of the chief judge of the circuit and an equal number of circuit judges and district judges of the circuit. |
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They went down the list until they found a judge agreeable to both parties, or if none could be found they had to take the last one on the list. |
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The judge has wide latitude to reject evidence for the trial. |
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As such, it is his duty to preside at services, call local leaders, and judge the worthiness of members for service. |
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The principle prevailed later that an offence already punished by a secular judge was no longer punishable by the ecclesiastical judge. |
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The President has renominated a judge that Congress previously rejected. |
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But the final straw came last weekend when she threw an allnight birthday bash for fellow X Factor judge Nick Grimshaw. |
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The judge read a list of prisoners' names. She then indicated that the aforementioned were to be set free. |
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At the vote, Wheeler he said he believes Bassett will be an activist judge and questioned whether he would strictly interpret the constitution. |
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In criminal cases the situation is a little different, because in this case the judge does not have the authority to change the jury decision. |
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No one cares about what a judge thinks, if, as and when. All that counts is what he says. |
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This is a judge who is antipublicity, anti-media, anti-interference in his court. |
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The foreperson may be selected by the judge or by vote of the jurors, depending on the jurisdiction. |
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In this manner, the Duke, being the largest land owner, could not act as a judge in his own case. |
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What effect Active Liberty may have on the Roberts Court or popular conceptions of what it means to be an activist judge remains to be seen. |
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Thanks to their barograph, however, they could judge their height above the sea. |
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Manslaughter and other crimes in which the killing was committed without intent, however, are judged by a professional judge instead. |
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For most indictable offences, the accused person can elect to be tried by either a judge alone or a judge and jury. |
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The trial judge has the discretion to direct that one or two alternate jurors also be appointed. |
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The sessions judge considered the acquittal as perverse and referred the case to the high court. |
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The prosecution argued that the jury had been misled by the presiding judge on four crucial points. |
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Three, the judge wrongly told the jury that the provocation can also come from a third person. |
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The trial judge may overrule a jury's guilty verdict, but may not overrule an acquittal. |
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The judge can impose the death penalty even if the jury recommends life without parole. |
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Ally McBeal appealed to the judge for fashion freedom and won, but real-life judges want a conservative approach to the bench. |
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The judge may but does not always follow the recommendations of the jury when deciding on a sentence. |
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Some challenges are issued during voir dire while others are presented to the judge at the end of voir dire. |
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The judge calls out the names of the anonymously challenged prospective jurors and those return to the pool for consideration in other trials. |
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The trier of fact is a judge in bench trials, or the jury in any cases involving a jury. |
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If evidence of authenticity is lacking in a bench trial, the trial judge will simply dismiss the evidence as unpersuasive or irrelevant. |
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He was also, ex officio, a judge in the Court of Appeal and the President of the Chancery Division. |
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Judge thyself with the judgment of sincerity, and thou will judge others with the judgment of charity. |
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Neither judge nor jury can initiate an inquiry, and judges rarely ask witnesses questions directly during trial. |
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The examining judge conducts investigations into serious crimes or complex inquiries. |
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The judge questions witnesses, interrogates suspects, and orders searches for other investigations. |
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Both the prosecution and the defense may request the judge to act and may appeal the judge's decisions before an appellate court. |
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In the past the examining judge could order committal of the accused, this power being subject to appeal. |
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If the examining judge decides there is a valid case against a suspect, the accused is sent for adversarial trial by jury. |
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The law school graduate clerked for the supreme court judge for the summer. |
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The jury system was abolished in 1969, and cases are decided by a judge alone, sometimes assisted by two assessors. |
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He argued with the judge contemptuously, showing no respect or remorse for his actions. |
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The judge at the dog show took points off the Irish setter's dead set because its right ear twitched a few times. |
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This eventually led to the judge being disqualified from deciding the case. |
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The African bishops could not come to terms and the Donatists asked Constantine to act as a judge in the dispute. |
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Each judge had strong ties to the party in power at the time of their appointment. |
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A judge from a Tunisian court specializing in financial crimes was assigned to the case. |
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In practice, each member state nominates a judge whose nomination is then ratified by all the other member states. |
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The judge can then consider the Restatement section and make an informed decision as to how to apply it in the case at hand. |
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The prosecution has introduced evidence, including canceled checks, to show that the judge failed to declare part of his income. |
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For example, one pro forma audience may be heard for a judge to order the production of a certain proof or to schedule another date. |
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Declinatory exceptions do not tend to defeat the demand, but only to decline the jurisdiction of the judge before whom it is brought. |
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A university can confer a degree upon a distinguished man because it can judge whether his degreeless condition is due to accident or not. |
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Subpoenas are usually issued by the clerk of the court in the name of the judge presiding over the case. |
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One can judge comparative density, and therefore to some extent strength, by visual inspection. |
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The judge recused herself from that case, citing a possible conflict of interest. |
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So, the dreamer is left to accept the dream because they lack the choice to judge it. |
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Archaeologists will judge us on the standard and quality of the mass-produced and regard our pottery as an archaising curiosity. |
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A judge that has to rely on his subjective wisdom, in the form of judicious weighing, relies on Ch'uan. |
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He won't get any drinkypoos out here, Rick said and smiled. He'll be sober as a judge by the time we get to Taiwan. |
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His ancestors include John Hathorne, the only judge involved in the Salem witch trials who never repented of his actions. |
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We can judge of the probable success of this course, by the various laws passed to alter, or amend, or repeal, previous emendatory acts. |
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Of all men it is true that they feel and energize first, they reflect and judge afterwards. |
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The judge declared a sentence of death by hanging for the infamous cattle rustler. |
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The judge sentenced the embezzler to ten years in prison, along with a hefty fine. |
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To know fiddles and judge them you must be always looking at them. For a time, at least, I got my eye in by dwelling on the best models. |
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Everyone was surprised by the severeness of the sentence the judge imposed. |
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He had shouted down at least one judge in the Mairie de Luxembourg after a dozen cigars had failed to bring about his ends. |
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In fact, Innes was probably the most antinationalist of any federal judge at the time. |
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However, the rotation of military personnel among the staff judge advocate offices hampered the continuity of the program. |
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This place was returning to me a sense of my own motion through it, my stoopings into rooms, my pauses to judge the way. |
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An Eastern king put a judge to death for an iniquitous sentence, and ordered his hide to be stuffed into a cushion, and placed upon the tribunal. |
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One cannot consistently judge the grammaticality of utterances without knowing what grammatical types their constituent morphemes represent. |
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