Turning first to Skinner, note that procreation had nothing to do with the crime in question, recidivist theft. |
|
Today we have the phenomenon of recidivist murder committed by released killers. |
|
He is beginning to look like a recidivist groveler who should not be allowed any nearer the Oval Office than the public tour. |
|
Alcohol ignition interlocks have been proposed as a further intervention to reduce the prevalence of recidivist drink driving. |
|
We support anything that tries to get recidivist drink-drivers off the road. |
|
It would hardly be worth a full column to focus on his association's recidivist ideas, but this study is an all-time low. |
|
The possibility of recidivist behavior can be kept to a minimum through regular counseling sessions, Chang said. |
|
It is unlikely they would be lenient with someone they view as a recidivist. |
|
Violent recidivist criminals should be permanently removed from society, perhaps by being put to work on an outlying New Zealand island. |
|
A non-custodial sentence, by definition, is regarded as something that is imposed when the person is not a serious or recidivist offender. |
|
The service's team manager, Juliet Yolland, said recidivist truants were typically missing between 60-80 percent of the 186-day school year. |
|
I want to see these young, recidivist offenders locked up, as they should be. |
|
What evidence does he have that new sentencing laws are providing greater protection to the community from serious and recidivist offenders? |
|
The forecasts show that recidivist offenders are now more likely to be convicted, taken off the streets, and kept off the streets. |
|
Compulsory fitting of the alerting system was deemed acceptable, but only for new vehicles or recidivist speeders. |
|
In New Zealand the recidivist index showed that where people were released without parole, their rate of offending was twice the level of those who were released on parole. |
|
But there can be no progress when Greeks and Germans see each other, respectively, as heartless austerians and recidivist rule-breakers. |
|
He is a recidivist hold-up type convicted several times and today suspected of four murders, maybe more. |
|
A monetary fine cannot substitute for the sentence if the perpetrator is a recidivist. |
|
That provision protects children from the risk of becoming victims of recidivist offenders. |
|
|
Not surprisingly prior firesetting and match play has been consistently found across most studies as one of the key predictors in recidivist firesetting. |
|
However, last time we were there, she proved unexpectedly recidivist. |
|
We certainly know that people who meet the diagnostic criteria for being a psychopath, have a very high risk of being violent and have a very high recidivist rate. |
|
It means that if a recidivist parolee is given a 10-year sentence by the court, for instance, he or she will actually have to serve a 15-year sentence. |
|
A recidivist drink-driver was up on another set of serious drink-driving charges, and the case was dismissed because of delays in the justice system. |
|
But its problems with boy racers, recidivist teenage car thieves, drugs and child abuse made it as good a choice as any other provincial centre for the launch. |
|
Much of the public support grew out of sympathy for Polly Klaas, a young girl who was kidnapped and murdered in California by a recidivist criminal. |
|
The police have gone out and caught the recidivist burglars. |
|
However, as the infringements were contemporaneous the Commission took the view that this did not qualify as recidivist behaviour and did not increase the fine for SGL and Tokai Carbon. |
|
Effective rehabilitation approaches should include interventions related to these types of variables, particularly when dealing with young recidivist offenders. |
|
Rather than flags and banners Mr Bakiyev's enraged opponents carried staves, clubs and baseball bats. There are a number of lessons to be drawn from these histories of recidivist uprisings. |
|
If folly were a legal concept, it would be called recidivism, a recidivist being an offender who repeatedly commits crimes in the knowledge that doing so is almost certain to land him back behind bars. |
|
Here is the recidivist's recidivist, the rogue of rogues, the villain for whom Timeform would have implemented a third squiggle. |
|
Unlike Latin American governments, some of whom are recidivist bad debtors, Caribbean countries, with stable currencies and democracies, until recently looked like good risks. |
|
The accused shall hand over to this poor unfortunate recidivist his car, house and all its contents, including his wife. |
|
The recidivist rate of up to 80 percent is evidence of both. |
|
Other words spelled in the competition were recidivist, nyctitropism, roulade, and limuloid. |
|
Execution is still authorized, for example, for adultery, recidivist alcohol use, drug trafficking and drug possession, he said. |
|