As a result he received thirty-nine lashes for a crime for which many were transported or executed. |
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It is now widely accepted that a high proportion of crime is the result of drug addiction. |
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Rape has now been recognised as a war crime with its inclusion in the Geneva Convention against War Crimes. |
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A soldier from Bolton will face a court martial after being charged with a war crime while serving in Iraq. |
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This all changed after witnessing the attempted crime right outside my window that night. |
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The latter is a war crime under the Nuremberg precedent, as the editors of the Post, implicated in this process, are entirely aware. |
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During the Rwanda genocide, rape as a war crime received extensive international media coverage. |
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The authors found that treating drug abusers reduced the crime they committed by 51 percent. |
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They say an increasing number of prostitutes are walking the streets bringing violent and drug-related crime with them. |
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In some eating establishments it appears to be a serious crime for your offspring to talk above a whisper or wriggle slightly in their seats. |
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Later, the authorities said the soldiers might have been witnesses to a crime committed by others. |
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This normally takes the form of two witnesses to the crime or one witness and corroborating evidence, usually in the form of forensic evidence. |
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In fact, contact with many of them has taught me that it is possible to abominate the crime without always abominating the criminal. |
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Police have been unable to ascertain why the hate crime levels have decreased since the bombings. |
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We tend to take a clear-cut view of what being a victim of crime entails, and who the victim is in every case. |
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The statistics show the region has the second highest level of overall crime recorded by the police. |
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It prides itself on having a low crime rate and a good record of educational achievement. |
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When the costs of crime are assessed, account should be taken of losses recompensed through insurance. |
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Cities are torn by wars between local crime lords, and nations are rent by various dukes and counts dealing death. |
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Cash machine crime is increasing in Surrey and there have been incidents of cards being cloned after thieves tampered with machines. |
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Turning first to Skinner, note that procreation had nothing to do with the crime in question, recidivist theft. |
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One cannot just walk away from the scene of the crime without admitting wrongdoing. |
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The independent senator said a lot of the crime in the society was being committed by people of no fixed place of abode. |
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Judge Hans Bachl threw out the confession when the trial opened, although he admitted the crime during proceedings. |
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Also, should prisoners who repeatedly commit crime spend a longer time behind bars simply because they're recidivists? |
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The fair Agnes also confessed to her share in the crime of passion, and the lovers eventually abjured the realm. |
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It can form one of the two adminicles of evidence that must exist before it can hold that the person who committed the crime was the accused. |
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If poverty leads to lead exposure, and lead abets crime and poor health, then lead can be said to nudge indigent people toward crimes. |
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Creating a virus, they theorize, might be considered a form of abetting a crime by providing materials. |
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Indeed, it appears a war crime could be single murder or rape of a civilian by a soldier. |
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Child abduction is a rare enough crime and for two children to be taken by someone they don't know without signs of a struggle is stranger still. |
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It's no wonder the local Harlem crime lord calls on him when his daughter is kidnapped by the Mafia. |
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Liberal Democrats are often categorised as soft on crime and are used to rebuffing accusations of being soft on terrorism. |
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The cameras were also aimed at helping to detect youth crime and anti-social behaviour at the troublespot. |
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This is not to over-simplify the crime wave that's sweeping through the country with no apparent abatement. |
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He aimed his campaign at suburban and centrist voters, particularly through his conservative positions on crime and welfare. |
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Education, health, freedom from crime and improvements to the places where children live are keynotes for the organisation. |
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As a traditional leader I have to play my part in eradicating crime so that all of us can live in a crime-free rainbow nation. |
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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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If there is no mens rea such as in an accident, an individual cannot be found guilty of a crime requiring criminal intent. |
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The mens rea or mental element of a crime is usually based on the intention of the accused at the time. |
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It will also have a different crime rate, divergent patterns of morality, a different standard and notion of what counts as political realism. |
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The real problem was the fact that no intelligent debate on organised crime had taken place, he said. |
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Given the amount of crime committed by young people, it is sometimes tempting to think that a whole generation has gone off the rails. |
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While officers were covering the crime scene they discovered that the thieves had also raided the refrigerator for food. |
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A Burnley writer has won a national award from librarians and library readers for his best-selling series of crime novels. |
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The crime prevention message is put out as soon as the students set foot on campus as part of the induction process. |
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However, they also hope the operation will reduce overall crime levels in the area including drug dealing, burglaries, car thefts, and joyriding. |
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Stores with extensive ground-level car parking, which suffer car crime and loitering gangs of youths, are considering security patrols. |
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Years later he returns to London and organizes a group of street urchins into a petty crime gang which he joins. |
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A secret surveillance operation has exposed a catalogue of crime as gangs of youths run amok on the streets of a troubled York estate. |
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News that technology is assisting the fight against crime has been welcomed. |
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We also need the respect of the general public in the fight against crime and drugs. |
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Secondly, there has never been adduced a body of evidence that demonstrates the need to make a new crime out of a hitherto legitimate activity. |
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The fight against burglary, anti-social behaviour and serious drug crime are at the top of our list. |
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It is vital in the fight against crime that the public is able to trust law enforcement officials. |
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The only person who could do that would be somebody visiting the crime scene afterwards. |
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It's an intricate part of my culture of my tikanga and kawa, so what's the crime about that? |
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Women, as well as their accomplices, found guilty of this crime received fifty lashes. |
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The overall level of crime is flat and shows the impact the Safer Neighbourhood Teams are having on low-level crime such as shoplifting. |
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At various points the home fans joshed Ian Murray for the crime of being a former Hibs captain. |
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Homicide, for example, is such a crime because you need to prove actus reus, mens rea, concurrence, causation, and harm. |
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The Federal Trade Commission has named identity theft the fastest-growing white-collar crime today. |
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When white-collar crime gets tricky and important managers are implicated, internal auditors may be compromised. |
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There is white-collar crime including embezzlement, tax evasion, and bribes to officials. |
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A person has committed the actus reus of a crime with the appropriate mens rea. |
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Historical studies of white-collar crime have also traditionally focused on men. |
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He became an investigator, principally focusing on white-collar crime and political corruption cases. |
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Top-level vacancies in specialties ranging from white-collar crime to counterterrorism go begging for applicants. |
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Justice Minister Michael McDowell said white-collar crime was not victimless and its effects were felt across the economy. |
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In the brothel and nightclub strip, crime bosses got the green light to organise prostitution and illegal gambling rackets. |
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The alleged criminal conduct was a nonviolent white-collar crime of which the many bank depositors in the Pekin area were the victims. |
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But Woolrich pretty much dispensed altogether with the ratiocination of traditional crime fiction. |
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The growth of acquisitive crime predated the spread of heroin use, but eventually these trends became interconnected and fueled each other. |
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Davis sees the country as the weakest link in the struggle against organised crime in the region. |
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Given the choice, she would rather spend her time helping tackle crime than out on a boozy tour of the town centre. |
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Even as this nation's crime rate is falling, the prison population is rising. |
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Apologies should be taken automatically as acknowledgement of personal complicity in the crime or dereliction. |
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Yet their crime rates, by whatever measure one judged them, were very different. |
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Siegel further highlighted the role of abuse in the etiology of female crime in an investigation of women survivors of childhood sexual abuse. |
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We went back to the set and I watched the Falcon escape from bondage and alert the cops to where the crime boss and his rats were hiding out. |
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The right-wing press has jumped on fears about gun crime to whip up racism. |
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Policy wonks might have thought it a clever wheeze to apply New York Mayor Giuliani's zero tolerance on street crime to cannabis users. |
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We are achieving significant results in reducing crime and the fear of crime. |
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Do you believe that juvenile delinquency would decrease if crime comic books were not readily available to children? |
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Hammer was arrested on Sunday night after six people were questioned at a house near the crime scene. |
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At the same time, as the arrest rate for juvenile delinquency and crime rose in 1943 and 1944, commentators accused mothers of neglect. |
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Police arrested one man in connection with the crime and were questioning him yesterday. |
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He only turns to crime for revenge when he is accused of the attempted murder of a policeman. |
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Private security patrols could be deployed in the borough for the first time to quell fears of crime among residents near Wandsworth Common. |
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Fukuyama refers to high rates of crime and juvenile delinquency as a result of the lack of trust associated with social capital. |
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The new measures are likely to be added to the crime initiatives announced in the Queen's Speech. |
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But minor crimes and juvenile delinquency have pushed total crime numbers to record highs amid a long economic slowdown. |
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A North Yorkshire organisation which helps to steer young offenders away from a life of crime has won national acclaim. |
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Everyone present at that court was an accessory to the crime of the century. |
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Mark Godsland, crime reduction officer for the Cotswolds, said officers would always produce a warrant card to identify themselves to the public. |
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Each is accused of a past crime that they have not yet been prosecuted for. |
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Generally, we hold that there's no crime worse than murder, and we punish it more harshly than we do anything else. |
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Kerik reduced crime in the city's jails by 95 per cent and ensured crime rates continued to decline. |
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Bulgaria's overcrowded jails are more likely to serve as universities of crime than places of rehabilitation. |
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Why do government officials continually say that crime is coming down when officially crime is on the increase and getting worse all the time? |
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The residents' acute fear of crime is itself a source of real danger, warns Budapest fire chief Peter Bende. |
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Even TV shows are showing real life crime cases in lieu of dramatic reenactments. |
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A special car crime awareness drive is taking place all this month, with advice for drivers on ways to protect their property. |
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Dr Dahiya along with scientific officer MN Joshi, re-enacted the incident with a railway coach at the same spot where the crime took place. |
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In real life he's heavily involved in a secret life of gangland crime and kneecapping. |
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As juvenile crime rises, here and across the country, tonight's confessions of a York teenager make provocative reading. |
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International law defines this type of action as a war crime under the Geneva conventions. |
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His only crime was to wolf-whistle at a white woman behind the counter of a grocery store. |
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Mr. Wizard was arrested for practicing wizardry, a crime worthy of certain damnation in most parts. |
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Chomsky's interpretation of this was that Huntington was advocating saturation bombing which was a war crime under Nuremberg principles. |
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There is a lot of abuse, robbery, corruption, crime and theft of our wealth. |
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No one was ever been arrested for the crime and the manhunt continues to bring them to justice. |
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By the time they realize their mistake, Dennis has a protector, namely Robert, who has witnessed the crime from his hotel window. |
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The memo noted violation of that portion of the treaty could constitute a war crime and officials should proceed carefully, the Post said. |
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By law, if three or more people witness a crime on the scale of murder, the one who committed the crime had no right to a fair trial. |
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The sentence has the public, never that trusting of politicians to begin with, wondering how seriously white-collar crime is being taken by the courts. |
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The high incidence of white-collar crime poses a serious threat to entrepreneurship and the future of legitimate business activities in Eastern Europe. |
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Forced marriage is commonplace, and was only made a crime in June of this year. |
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These widespread and systematic sexual assaults can collectively be described as a crime against humanity. |
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A person who is charged with a crime is considered innocent until proved guilty. |
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On the most politically charged issues, like crime and welfare reform, hacks thought wonks were from Pluto and wonks thought hacks were from Uranus. |
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The government, which stopped publishing crime statistics years ago, insists that violence has abated. |
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He confessed after six hours of questioning, and was convicted despite the fact DNA from the crime scene implicated someone else. |
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If you try to report a burglary or street crime anywhere, you get a crime number but all our units are out raising parking wonga and speeding tickets. |
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But the other side of the coin would be, inevitably, the flowering of crime and corruption around the gambling business. |
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A staggering 80 percent of college women do not report the crime to police, compared to 67 percent of non-students. |
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Thanks to CompStat and strategies added by Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, crime continued to decline. |
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He was twice arrested but never formally charged for any crime relating to the case in Aruba. |
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Victims of online fraud could find it harder to recover their losses as banks and building societies brace themselves for a surge in crime in the run-up to Christmas. |
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It's for the crime of apostasy that Ayatollah Khomenei sent death squads for Salman Rushdie. |
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Because of the obligation to make reparation that a crime against humanity always imposes. |
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Human trafficking was once a crime associated primarily with a range of small to large crime groups. |
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Because of the type of crime we are dealing with, this has to be a close-knit community. |
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In Turkey, crime groups in border areas are exploiting the labor of Syrian male refugees who cannot find legitimate employment. |
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Here is the best book I have read on the role of organized crime in southern Italy, John Dickie's Cosa Nostra. |
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Coverage of juvenile crime can influence public attitudes about crime prevention programs and set the agenda for public-policy making and funding. |
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Valente lends some credence to the description of the Ndrangheta being the most powerful organized crime group in the world. |
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Did he denounce the involvement of organized crime in the abduction and disappearance of 43 students in the nearby city of Iguala? |
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Mandelbaum began her climb to the top of the crime world as a peddler on the rough-and-tumble, bustling streets of New York City. |
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But it remains a moral crime to vilify good cops who have made the city safe, saving thousands of lives. |
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Should a criminal be held responsible for his crime when a brain scan can demonstrate some abnormality in his neural circuitry? |
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But I think we have shown that we have the capacity to reach a long way to find the perpetrators of this crime and to bring them to justice and call them to account. |
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Denied parole nine straight times, he insists he is innocent of the crime for which he was convicted. |
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The other is the police station, whence officers make occasional sallies to round up drivers or follow up a crime identified by the CCTV operators. |
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Sgt Desmond appealed for witnesses to the crime to come forward. |
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Police have now issued a picture of Mr Goldman in a bid to get as many witnesses to the crime or the immediate aftermath to come forward to help them in their investigations. |
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The man's crime was, without doubt, terrible and beyond reason. |
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However, some of our more solvable problems such as street crime and youth gangs who prey on innocents in broad daylight can be eradicated in short order. |
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However headline-grabbing it may have been, the debate around organised crime and politics in Bulgaria goes much further and deeper than the Kostov whiz-bang episode. |
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Rather, the Democrats got more liberal, on crime and bussing, and the white ethnics who felt victimized by these policies fled. |
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And what was the impact of the loss of the Rugby League competition on towns like Walgett, did it have an impact on crime figures, on juvenile delinquency? |
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If you floated you were guilty of the crime you were accused of. |
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He added that Norse has good relations with the FBI and has consulted with them on other crime cases. |
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The association between Ambien and crime also stems from the correlation between insomnia and depression, she said. |
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But when I talked to them, none of the witnesses to the crime had done so. |
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It is, alas, an all-too-familiar scene on the streets of Rochdale as car crime soars and thieves think nothing of ending a night's joyride by destroying the vehicle. |
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The crime of antisemitism is an ageless one, an international one, and a heinous one. |
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That trial unveiled financing links between the Cercle Wagram and the brise de Mer, a Corsican organized crime group. |
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Those who aided the commission of crime but were not present at the scene of the crime were regarded as accessories before the fact or principals in the third degree. |
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Since the latter half of the nineteenth century, the police have been the foremost public authorities who regulate juvenile crime and delinquency. |
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I developed a taste for crime fiction, which I carried on reading widely. |
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But, as is often the case, what may be equally as damning as the crime will be the cover-up. |
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As the brazen crime leads to the discovery of several bodies, media coverage feeds a sense of security imperiled. |
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It is very difficult to sit by helplessly while a friend is imprisoned for a crime that is too implausible to comprehend. |
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The chatter in the crime world is that blanco died as she reigned, in a blaze of drive-by bullets. |
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Juvenile crime focused primarily on merchants or less organized forms of thievery in semipublic areas such as dumps, junkyards, and railroad yards. |
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On September 16 he was called into court in Manhattan, charged with the alarming crime of punching a cripple. |
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There are many loose ends surrounding the crime and the bickering, even though somewhat abated, will undoubtedly flare again. |
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Worsening crime in San Miguel will drive a nail further into its coffin. |
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A general read aloud the order that Pvt. Eddie Slovik was to be executed for the crime of desertion. |
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He invoked a New York to come like the New York that once was, before chaos and crime gave liberalism a bad name. |
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If you are accused of a crime you have the right to be judged by a jury of your peers. |
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The results of any dissemination would automatically be classified as a crime against humanity. |
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The sentence for murder is, in all cases, mandatory and depends upon the age of the offender at the time of the crime or conviction. |
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It is a sin or a crime to perform a forbidden action or not to perform a mandatory action. |
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By the rules of common law, a criminal outlaw did not need to be guilty of the crime he was outlawed for. |
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A felony is generally considered a crime of high seriousness, while a misdemeanor is not. |
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Many emigrants from South Africa also state that crime was a big motivator for them to leave. |
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A person accused of a crime is considered innocent until proven guilty. |
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The police made a rigorous examination of the evidence at the crime scene. |
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The movie was criticized for glamorizing crime and violence. |
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London was startled by a crime of singular ferocity and rendered all the more notable by the high position of the victim. |
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Concern about the relationship between disorder and crime is further deepened by the fact that disorder and crime often co-exist at places. |
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If, as she hinted, Dr Serrou had spent the night with Bachelet, the inexplicable brainstorm might have stemmed from a crime passionel. |
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Since dating behaviors are derived from the prostitution model, date rape, instead of being a crime of violence,... The date rapist is confused. |
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Some consider the defacement of the Sphinx to be the most egregious crime of Napolean's campaigns. |
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What lawbreakers like that need is a good flogging. Do that and watch the crime rate plummet. |
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Word reached the ear of the prosecuting attorney of the only testimony that could establish a motive and make the crime a hanging offence. |
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The crime lord dispatched his favorite hatchet man to make sure the witness would not testify. |
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Welsh Law emphasised the payment of compensation for a crime to the victim, or the victim's kin, rather than punishment by the ruler. |
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For example, murder is a common law crime rather than one established by an Act of Parliament. |
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The Lake District has been the setting for crime novels by Reginald Hill, Val McDermid and Martin Edwards. |
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Today crime figures are made available nationally at Local Authority and Ward level. |
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The second formal method of charging someone with a crime is by information. Informations are filed by prosecutors without grand jury review. |
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The investigation into the crime has lead to various leads as well as plenty of dead ends. |
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I've argued that we cannot rely on the justice system to control crime and that our recent attempt to do so has been a dismal failure. |
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Similarly, the rights of those accused of a crime include the right to present a defense before a court. |
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Vicky Pryce points out that crime rates are falling while the numbers in prison rise. |
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Kings became the heads of centralised nation states, reducing crime and violence but making the ideal of a unified Christendom more distant. |
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The crime rate in Leeds is well above the national average, like many other English major cities. |
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The new members of the crime organization got the most dangerous jobs. I'll leave the specifics to your imagination. |
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It uses locations around Portsmouth for the stories, and includes writing by crime novelists William Sutton, Diana Bretherick, and others. |
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Blackstone's book stated that dissent from the Church of England was a crime and that Dissenters could not be loyal subjects. |
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Murray told Turing that the burglar was an acquaintance of his, and Turing reported the crime to the police. |
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The evidence found at the crime scene was not linkable to the primary suspect. |
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The CID bureaus are the crime investigation unit and forms a vital part in each provincial police service. |
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One study of Denmark found that providing immigrants with voting rights reduced their crime rate. |
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Its figures relate to crime reports where officers have flagged a case as involving abuse linked to faith or belief. |
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By the early 1980s, Coventry had one of the highest unemployment rates in the country and crime rates rose well above the national average. |
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Scholars have seen this change of Shakespeare's as adding to the darkness of Macbeth's crime as the worst violation of hospitality. |
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The young couple thought of the small town they chose to live in as Mayberry, especially because of its low crime rate and excellent schools. |
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In any state of society where crime can be profitable you have got to have a harsh criminal law and administer it ruthlessly. |
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In 2013, The Murder of Roger Ackroyd was voted the best crime novel ever by 600 fellow writers of the Crime Writers' Association. |
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The lower attendance led to a much more relaxed atmosphere and massively reduced crime levels compared to previous years. |
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The Greeks said they would not pay unless it was proved that the crime was committed by Greeks. |
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The crime of piracy is considered a breach of jus cogens, a conventional peremptory international norm that states must uphold. |
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Popular literary genres such as the Western and hardboiled crime fiction developed in the United States. |
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A feature of modern island life is the low crime rate and they are considered to be amongst the safest places to live in Britain. |
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The Shetland Quartet by Ann Cleeves, who previously lived in Fair Isle, is a series of crime novels set around the islands. |
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In 2013 her novel Red Bones became the basis of BBC crime drama television series Shetland. |
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Car crime is a central theme in the film Twin Town, which was set in and around Swansea and Port Talbot. |
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She said that this was partly due to the government removing red tape and scrapping targets to allow the police to concentrate on crime fighting. |
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Participatory offences include aiding, abetting, counselling, or procuring the act of some crime or conspiracy. |
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As with crime statistics elsewhere, they are broadly divided into victim studies and police reports. |
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The Crime Survey for England and Wales is an attempt to measure both the amount of crime, and the impact of crime on England and Wales. |
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They are used to plan, and measure the results of, crime reduction or perception measures. |
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These figures were created by combining police recorded crime and the British Crime Survey. |
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Genocide at Srebrenica is the most serious war crime that any Serbs were convicted of. |
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Breaches of the Geneva Conventions is the most serious war crime that Bosniaks were convicted of. |
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In the 1970s, job losses due to industrial restructuring caused New York City to suffer from economic problems and rising crime rates. |
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Sociologists and criminologists have not reached consensus on the explanation for the dramatic decrease in the city's crime rate. |
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Money laundering is the process of transforming the profits of crime and corruption into ostensibly 'legitimate' assets. |
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In the 20th century, the seizing of wealth again became popular when it was seen as an additional crime prevention tool. |
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Organized crime received a major boost from Prohibition and a large source of new funds that were obtained from illegal sales of alcohol. |
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An offender's possession of the proceeds of his own crime falls within the UK definition of money laundering. |
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The possession of money without either a financial transaction or an intent to conceal is not a crime in the United States. |
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This crime rate was correlated with regions with low employment and was not entirely dependent on ethnicity. |
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The relations between Cuban and Colombian organized crime remained strong until the 1970s, when Colombian cartels began to vie for power. |
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The Sherlock Holmes stories are generally considered milestones in the field of crime fiction. |
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It has greatly compounded its error by suspending the redoubtable Gita Sahgal for the crime of going public with her concerns. |
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As of 18 January 2013, 22 Sun journalists had been arrested, including their crime reporter Anthony France. |
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Ancient codes regulated in this case the crime of a prostitute that dissimulated her profession. |
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Street prostitutes are at higher risk of violent crime than brothel prostitutes and bar prostitutes. |
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Kidnapping can be accompanied by bodily injury which elevates the crime to aggravated kidnapping. |
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The fact that a kidnapped victim may have been taken across state lines brings the crime within the ambit of federal criminal law. |
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During peak years of violent crime in the city, gun battles between rival cartels, and between cartels and the police, erupted in public. |
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However, there are differences between the crime rates in the Brazilian states. |
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Some crime types are above average, notably the highest homicide rate in Western Europe. |
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In 1764, Voltaire successfully intervened and secured the release of Claude Chamont for the crime of attending Protestant services. |
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Differentiating between a bias crime and a nonbias crime can be difficult, particularly in an atmosphere of heightened racial tensions. |
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Much as with crime and punishment, we have only little direct evidence from later prehistory where legal procedure is concerned. |
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Prosecution for a crime already judged is impossible even if incriminating evidence has been found. |
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Nobody shall be punished multiple times for the same crime on the base of general criminal law. |
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However, it does not extend to autrefois acquit, and so if a person is acquitted of a crime he can be retried. |
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The malice involved in the crime is transferred to the killing, resulting in a charge of manslaughter. |
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States, there exists the specific crime of Vehicular or intoxication manslaughter. |
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Unlawful act is when a person commits a crime that unintentionally results in the death of another person. |
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He has been commissioned to edit and introduce ten anthologies of classic crime short stories for the series. |
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Arguably, what is so hateful about a hate crime is that it is an attempt by some individual or group to treat a Person as a Nonperson. |
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Killing any person, no matter what crime he may have committed, is considered unimaginably terrible. |
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Chicago ended 2013 with 415 murders, the lowest number of murders since 1965, and overall crime rates dropped by 16 percent. |
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Something within him once or twice commanded him to throw his crime into the fire, while yet it is obliterable. |
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His other film credits include the independent horror film Deathwatch in Prague and Fakers, a comic crime caper. |
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This has been possible because of improved communications, and has been caused by factors such as the fear of crime and poor urban environments. |
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The crime was differentiated from wartime privateering in the statute, and defined who was punishable in very specific terms. |
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Other types of property crime have also decreased, but rates are still fairly high. |
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Roughly a quarter of the police and crime commissioners elected in England and Wales in the 2012 election were independents. |
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The increase in population brought with it an increase in crime and the Penzance force grew accordingly. |
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Such was the impact on crime rates that between February 1922 and February 1923, not a single offence had been brought before the courts. |
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Devon and Cornwall are amongst the safest counties in the UK, with the 4th lowest crime rate per 1000 people in England. |
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Public perceptions of crime and confidence in the police was also better than the national average. |
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In detail they were graded as 'excellent' for reducing crime, suppressing gun crime and suppressing knife crime. |
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Abuse of a protective emblem amounts to perfidy and constitutes a war crime under the customary law of armed conflict. |
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According to government figures Southampton has a higher crime rate than the national average. |
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There is some controversy regarding comparative crime statistics due to inconsistencies between different police forces recording methodologies. |
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However, in neighbouring Dorset crimes reports withdrawn or shown to be false are not recorded, reducing apparent crime figures. |
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Dissatisfied with the economic conditions, as well as the amounts of crime and corruption in Ukraine, Ukrainians protested and organized strikes. |
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The CIA World Factbook lists widespread crime and underground economic activity among major issues in Moldova. |
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On May 21, 2001, the National Assembly of France passed the Taubira law, recognizing slavery as a crime against humanity. |
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Community-based crime prevention strategies include Neighbourhood Watch, Safety House, Police Beat Shopfront Schemes, and Home Assist Services. |
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The police force was to be made up of locals who were to regulate the crime occurring in the kingdom. |
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Mexico's National Geography and Statistics Institute estimated that in 2014, one out of five Mexicans was victim of crime in some form. |
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It is held that the Gambino crime family controlled the New York waterfront and the Genovese crime family controlled the New Jersey side. |
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With the rising number of adults using alcohol, there is a rising crime rate, especially involving violence toward women, and tribal warfare. |
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Some areas of Jamaica, particularly cities such as Kingston, experience high levels of crime and violence. |
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The two basic elements of a crime are the act of doing that which is criminal, and the intention to carry it out. |
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Since discontinuation of power is not a voluntary act, not grossly negligent, and is in the patient's best interests, no crime takes place. |
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It is the mental element of committing a crime and establishes the element of intent. |
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They got off for murder, but still went down for manslaughter, since that is a crime of basic intent. |
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The response to crime committed by neighbouring tribes or communities included a formal apology, compensation or blood feuds. |
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The person offered for execution did not have to be an original perpetrator of the crime because the system was based on tribes, not individuals. |
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The public opinion on the death penalty varies considerably by country and by the crime in question. |
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The just use of this power, far from involving the crime of murder, is an act of paramount obedience to this Commandment which prohibits murder. |
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All that can truly be said, without exception, is that a crime requires some external state of affairs that can be categorized as criminal. |
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The traditional common law definitions and the modern definitions approach the crime from different angles. |
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For example, the crime of theft of government property would include as an attendant circumstance that the property belong to the government. |
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For example, the crime of murder must include a mental requirement of at least subjective foresight of death. |
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For example, at common law, an unlawful homicide committed recklessly would ordinarily constitute the crime of voluntary manslaughter. |
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Negligence does not carry criminal responsibility unless a particular crime provides for its punishment. |
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