He encouraged her to read out the death warrants of convicted felons and witness the executions. |
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But would it not be well to limit grand juries to the investigation of felons, and leave misdemeanors to inferior courts? |
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Why should downloaders, freeloaders, pirates and copyright felons be entitled to the protection of the law? |
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In Scotland and in England royal assent was required in order to dissect the bodies of hanged felons. |
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Among those who are guilty of an offense against good taste, he is a scofflaw tormented by felons and scoundrels. |
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It was a fate suffered both by the state prisoners, who were felons, and by county misdemeanants. |
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Convicted felons could be encouraged to run across a distance of, say, a hundred metres, while the marksmen took turns to mow them down. |
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A helmeted bike messenger with no teeth rallied a group of just-released felons at the job-search firm America Works a little over a year ago. |
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It's not like he pals around and makes sundry business deals with convicted felons. |
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Her patients range from the terminally ill to manipulative hypochondriacs, from veiled Bangladeshi women to convicted felons. |
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The searches would not detect felons who had committed felonies in other states, and then moved to Washington. |
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I mean do you ever see situations where monies are taken away from convicted felons in order to compensate the victims? |
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The few pretenders who remained were a disappointing assortment of dim, second-class felons and impotent thugs. |
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If you're a convicted felon, go where felons are, not where good people are. |
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As I've noted before and noted today in my column, there is still no system for tracking criminal illegal alien felons and other inmates. |
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Accused felons were allowed to call witnesses, and defendants were given other procedural protections. |
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Bush has passed a fair proportion of his setting new records for the number of felons you can fry in a single year. |
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In Florida, the voter rolls were purged of 50,000 to 80,000 supposed felons. |
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Indeed, the role of journalists and the media in dealing with criminals or suspected felons is a grey area with undefined boundaries. |
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It is much better to stop the crime happening, rather than having police chasing felons after the event, don't you think? |
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As with many other laws in the United States, legislation denying voting rights to convicted felons and other offenders varies widely from state to state. |
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The waifs, strays, deodands, goods of felons and fugitives, etc., within the hundred belonged to the lord if the bailiff of the hundred seized them first. |
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The issue of whether convicted felons can profit from the sale of their stories, which are inevitably entangled with their victims' stories, is a familiar one. |
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Those kinds of places were only good to find felons and thieves. |
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Applied as a poultice it has been greatly beneficial in the treatment of felons, and internally administered has cure bronchocele when iodine has failed. |
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On January 23 the center was raided by a special SWAT-type police squad at 5 a.m. on the false claim that the center was harboring a rapist, drug dealers and felons. |
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It can be made into a salve or the tincture can be painted on boils, felons, carbuncles, abscesses, inflamed acne, cellulitis and other local inflammations. |
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By contrast, a Democratic bill sponsored by Cardin is more expansive and applies to all felons. |
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All the felons had done was to jack the car up and change the wheel. |
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Trying to prevent convicted felons from committing more crimes raises profound questions of character, habit, and the limits of social intervention. |
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They're standing behind convicted criminals, convicted felons. |
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The sergeant fields complaints from businesses, keeps an eye out for felons and new faces on the street, and makes sure that certain hot spots are kept relatively clear. |
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The now-convicted felons will hear their sentences in January, but their story continues to spiral downward. |
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However, felons may qualify for restoration of some rights after a certain period of time has passed. |
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Convicted felons may not be eligible for certain professional licenses or bonds, or may raise the cost of an employer's insurance. |
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Many landlords will not rent to felons, although a blanket ban on renting to felons may violate federal housing law. |
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Banks may refuse to issue loans to felons, and a felony conviction may prevent employment in banking or finance. |
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The NRA has fought for the rights of felons to buy and own firearms. |
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They could confiscate the estates of traitors and felons, and regrant these at will. |
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It is a court of original jurisdiction, and thus handles mostly trials of accused felons. |
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In 1969 two felons held up a pony-keg station in Philadelphia with two seven and one-half-foot medium action spinrods. |
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He also improved bail in January 1484, to protect suspected felons from imprisonment before trial and to protect their property from seizure during that time. |
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A common term of parole is to avoid associating with other felons. |
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In some neighborhoods with high rates of felony conviction, this creates a situation where many felons live with a constant threat of being arrested for violating parole. |
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Paronychia and felons are likewise surgical problems easily solved in a primary care office with a finger block, glove tourniquet and strict attention to delicate surgery. |
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Looking at the Jury and the turbulent audience, he might have thought that the usual order of things was reversed, and that the felons were trying the honest men. |
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Many states do not allow expungement, regardless of the offense, though felons can seek pardons and clemency, potentially including restoration of rights. |
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