It is said that the remark about being a troublemaker was so highly prejudicial to the defendant that the trial should not have continued. |
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Did any of the background dirt about the doctor come before the jury, or was it ruled prejudicial? |
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What was excised was irrelevant or prejudicial material that did not go before the jury. |
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The Compromise fostered a climate in which majority voting prejudicial to the interests of a particular State tended to be avoided. |
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The animus and hostility and the intensity of feeling evidenced by this act of the accused does not outweigh its prejudicial effect. |
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So a stay that would last indefinitely would be presumptively prejudicial to the plaintiff. |
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They had infiltrated a military airfield, and this was regarded as prejudicial to the state's interests. |
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As the paragraph was extremely prejudicial, the appellants should have had the opportunity of replying to it. |
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Who, then, is to determine what is and what is not prejudicial to the safety and interests of the State? |
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So in that sense there is no problems with saying things which might be prejudicial in front of the jury. |
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There is all this evidence which can be brought out from her which is highly prejudicial to you, but you take those chances. |
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So what's their position on whether or not doli incapax protects children or in fact is sometimes prejudicial to their rights? |
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The author of the report that was said to be prejudicial was called as a witness. |
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This concern does not arise in a trial by judge alone such that the probative value of the evidence is outweighed by its prejudicial effect. |
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The prejudicial views of their contemporaries are only an unstudied, unnatural, and temporary aberration. |
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They are there to protect those accused from receiving an unfair trial because of prejudicial press reports. |
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Irving complains that the film has been edited and re-edited so as to present him in a prejudicial light. |
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The letter also contained references to drugs and matters that would have been prejudicial to the appellant. |
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I will allow this evidence to be received as its probative value clearly outweighs its prejudicial effect. |
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He will be neither consoled nor assured to be told that the prejudicial information was left out of account. |
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No doubt you were prepared to disclose that piece of advice because you did not think it particularly prejudicial to your client's case. |
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Its probative value outweighs the prejudicial effect it might have on the trial of the Defendant. |
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That makes it at least plausible for a social cognitive premise that views prejudicial or stereotype-laden cognitions as largely unavoidable for most humans. |
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Such a situation may be considered prejudicial to the solvency of a credit institution. |
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The Agency ruled that the proposed tariff increase was not prejudicial to the public interest. |
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If you succeed in making your opponent feel that his opinion, should it prove true, will be distinctly prejudicial to his interest, he will let it drop like a hot potato. |
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The Tribunal sought to help the complainant avoid prejudicial situations during the hearing. |
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The prejudicial effect on the jury would have been enormous. |
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The said conditions shall make allowance for the habits and customs of the prisoners and shall in no case be prejudicial to their health. |
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Drop-out rates and low success at school which are features of the urban state school system are most prejudicial to the poorest. |
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Rather we very quickly became convinced that it would be prejudicial not to open the door to this new form of working. |
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Reports should also indicate any assessment made of traditional practices persisting in society that are prejudicial to children's rights. |
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The absence of proper research into these supposedly rare diseases is prejudicial to thousands of patients. |
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The Court ruled that the probative value of the evidence outweighed its prejudicial effect, and that it should be admitted. |
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As I see it they are an attack on our reputation, and therefore prejudicial to our work as parliamentarians. |
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This is particularly so when third parties are targeted in a way that is unfairly prejudicial to them. |
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This manner of participation is not prejudicial to or inconsistent with the rights of the accused and a fair and impartial trial. |
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Being prejudicial and close-minded is a recipe for disaster. |
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In any event I think it plain that he did have a prejudicial interest and that neither he nor the council could reasonably have taken a different view. |
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That assertion, given by Shore in a pre-trial deposition, would have been too prejudicial to present to the jury, the court ruled. |
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Even some prejudicial rejection can also be okay, if the person socially shutting you down is in a committed relationship or has an incompatible sexual orientation. |
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It goes without saying that, in this respect, the Member States should respect the Treaty, and we already know the answer of the Court to a number of prejudicial questions that have previously been asked. |
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This view, which by a mass of evidence may be shown to be erroneous, is exerting a very prejudicial effect on the progress of actinochemistry. |
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An outdated pattern of dry-rot and ill-fitting prejudicial old-cloth. |
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The opposite can also happen and there can be a real problem when large amounts of extraneous, prejudicial and irrelevant information is included. |
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Deformation of the chassis will cause stress prejudicial to the pump and the drive device and put the coupling out of true, thereby causing vibrations, noise and premature wear. |
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Account shall always be taken of the climatic conditions to which the prisoners of war are accustomed and the conditions of transfer shall in no case be prejudicial to their health. |
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In redress, the grievor requested a review of the amount claimed by the Crown plus financial compensation for the unjust and prejudicial treatment he had suffered. |
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The minimum capital condition could thus be explained by the fact that transport undertakings generally have little capital of their own and that this is prejudicial to fair competition. |
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I was in the middle of the storm, accused, without rhyme or reason, by him and his family of having been prejudicial to him, of having been, in part, the cause of his departure. |
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In the event of the husband's absence, the wife has the right to request separation if this absence is prejudicial to her and if the husband's address is known. |
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School uniform is for heads to enforce but they should be extremely careful that the messages being given to young women are not encouraging prejudicial attitudes that dress is somehow a provocation. |
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It requires that the exercise of this right by the members of minorities should be respectful of the culture and language of the community as a whole and should not be prejudicial to national sovereignty. |
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This inquisitory process is judgemental, prejudicial and automatically assumes guilt and blame. |
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More importantly, the study shows that in death-penalty states, there is a disproportionate and prejudicial impact on minorities, the indigent, and those unrepresented by counsel or represented by ineffective counsel. |
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First thing you gotta have is some sort of confounding unfounded prejudicial spew and contrived agenda aimed at humanity. |
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In the light of the above, it is provisionally concluded that the imposition of measures would not have serious prejudicial effects on the activities of this user sector. |
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However, these measures cannot be applied in a manner which is prejudicial to or inconsistent with the rights of the suspect or accused and a fair and impartial trial. |
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Where other measures do exist, the union may be under a duty to suggest alternatives that are less disruptive of the collective agreement or prejudicial to the rights of other employees. |
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Furthermore, it is necessary to ensure that prejudicial positions involving significant market power will not be maintained or reestablished in these markets following the transition period. |
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This breach of her duties is at risk, first of all, of being prejudicial to all other members but also-and even more important-of discrediting the House itself. |
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Were there, hypothetically, to be any prejudicial effect resulting from the conduct that Ireland would restrain, this would be capable of reparation by appropriate means in due course. |
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On the other hand, if provincial authorities take a hands-off attitude as well, the resulting gap in enforcement could be highly prejudicial to vulnerable foreign workers. |
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As an alternate routing was included in the list of issues this was perceived to be prejudicial, and seen to disallow a full discussion on possible compromises. |
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In this case, the form completed by Dr. Morrison evidenced the fact that the infection had a prejudicial effect on the patient's general state, which was never in doubt. |
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The prejudicial effect of the disclosure of that information would be magnified by virtue of the fact that Standard Aero would have no access to similar information on the part of its competitors. |
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Through a series of simple but powerful headlines we hammer home the truth that travel restrictions for people living with HIV are pointless, prejudicial and hurt rather than help. |
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I am quite sure that too much bed, if not too much sleep, is prejudicial, though a certain amount is absolutely necessary. |
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Sometimes ethnic groups are subject to prejudicial attitudes and actions by the state or its constituents. |
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In this situation, the majority must have access to the powerstructure in order to enforce its superiority and prejudicial beliefs on others. |
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It is sometimes the case that victim impact statements include inappropriate material such as information that is prejudicial or antagonistic to the defendant. |
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In the event of conduct prejudicial to the interests of SAIFA, the Council may exclude one or more of its members and co-opt one or more replacements until the following General Assembly. |
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Those which form part of this plan prejudicial have a logic relentless and to leave itself this one it is necessary absolutely to make close-cropped table of all the negative feelings that there is in us and around us. |
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In general, the wide media portrayal of the author is said to have been inflammatory and prejudicial, with the result that the jurors formed a definite opinion as to her guilt and were exposed to an accusatory bias. |
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The Occupying Power shall not compel, coerce or induce civilian civil defence organizations to perform their tasks in any manner prejudicial to the interests of the civilian population. |
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If the decision to issue a prejudicial jury instruction is made by a single district court judge, and is unappealable, the litigant has to live with that decision forever. |
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The judge ruled that the prejudicial effect of the evidence outweighed its value. |
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For example, relevant evidence may be excluded if it is unfairly prejudicial, confusing, or the relevance or irrelevance of evidence cannot be determined by logical analysis. |
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Some librarians felt that Blyton's restricted use of language, a conscious product of her teaching background, was prejudicial to an appreciation of more literary qualities. |
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Were I to give you money, for whatever reason, it would be extremely prejudicial to your chances in court if you were unfortunate enough to appear there. |
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