Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

62 Sentences With "acted correctly"

How to use acted correctly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "acted correctly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "acted correctly". Mastering all the usages of "acted correctly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The Bank of Italy has always said it acted correctly.
But also anguish at whether we acted correctly in everything we did.
The state Election Board acted correctly in unanimously ordering a new election.
If you know of a case where America acted correctly, you tell me.
In May, when the investigation began, both companies said they had acted correctly.
UBI, which in the past has said it had always acted correctly, had no immediate comment.
The Bank of Spain said in February its staff had acted correctly in their oversight of Bankia.
He added that Germany's government had acted correctly by facilitating access to the short-time work allowance.
She added that Globo had acted correctly in suspending Mr. Mayer, 67, best known for playing moody, romantic figures.
A hefty 57% thought the soldier should never have been arrested, and only 32% said the army had acted correctly in charging him.
Navient said in its own public statement on the 2017 investigation that it had acted correctly and had "exceptional" results in most reviews.
"I am calm and confident in the results of this process since I have always acted correctly and honestly in my life," he added.
The NBA announced the next day that the refs had acted correctly on all aspects of the review and the final ruling on the play.
Also in emailed comments, Eni reiterated it had acted correctly in the purchase of OPL 245, saying it had worked directly with the Nigerian government.
"The authorities acted correctly in every aspect," Tilg reiterated several times in the ORF interview on March 16, and rejected all criticisms in an email to CNN.
Cementir Italia said in a statement that it had acted correctly and had bought ash and slag waste for its Taranto cement factory in accordance with regulations.
As Rosenstein rightly said in his memo, no experienced law enforcement figure thought that Comey acted correctly in issuing a public statement that explained his point of view.
"The retail industry is changing, and the Supreme Court has acted correctly in recognizing that it's time for outdated sales tax policies to change as well," the NRF said.
But Obama acted quickly and acted correctly, responding as he did after Britain ignored America's wish and led the West to China's Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank in March 85033.
"UniCredit...expresses its full satisfaction having always maintained, with the utmost conviction, that its representatives and employees, including those who have left the bank, always acted correctly," a UniCredit spokesman said.
MILAN, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Italian defence group Finmeccanica said on Friday it had acted correctly in the sale of a 40 percent stake in rail signalling company Ansaldo STS to Japan's Hitachi.
Thomas, joined by Alito and Gorsuch, wrote in dissent that Garza had waived his right to the appellate process itself during the plea bargain, so his lawyer had acted correctly by not filing anything.
Geronzi's lawyers over the years have argued that he had no specific powers over Cirio at the time of its bankruptcy, when he was at the helm of lender Capitalia, and that he had acted correctly.
"We are certain all of the people from Mountrigi or Televisa that have dealt with FIFA have acted correctly and have not paid any bribes nor any kickback to FIFA official related to the acquisition of rights," the Televisa spokesman said.
Cole said Trump acted correctly in launching that strike, arguing that the administration was simply enforcing the "red line" established by former President Obama in 2013 in the wake of an even more deadly chemical attack carried out by Assad against civilians.
The judge who sentenced him, however, denied both of his requests on Sunday, saying Papadopoulos hadn't filed any court appeals within the window he was allowed and gave a firm nod that the office of special counsel, which prosecuted Papadopoulos, has acted correctly.
" While the general was alarmed, the presidential report concluded, he and other officers had "acted correctly out of instinct, not informed guidance, for in the years leading up to Able Archer they had received no guidance as to the possible significance of apparent changes in Soviet military and political thinking.
On the other hand, if the United States acted correctly in its efforts to deter the further use of chemical weapons by employing military force, then international lawyers may be revealing themselves to be wedded to an outmoded and formalistic ideas about the international system — to a worldview that overrates the sovereignty of nation-states and underrates the lives of people living within them.
Republican leaders contend Trump acted correctly in the face of Soleimani's aggression toward Americans and on Wednesday House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthyKevin Owen McCarthyGOP leaders take aim at Democrats over rhetoric on Iran Election experts urge Trump, congressional leaders to end stalemate at FEC This week: House to vote on resolution limiting Trump on Iran after strike MORE (R-Calif.) shot down the notion Trump's decision to call for the airstrike required advance congressional approval, making the case the president acted within his constitutional rights to protect the country.
However, Assistant Commissioner Wong insisted that they had "not departed from normal practices" and had "acted correctly under the laws".
Timeform described the decision as "inequitable" and "unjust", but pointed out that the committee had acted correctly according to the rules of racing.
Tovey stated that the two officers had acted correctly in the circumstances. He threatened to resign his position and appear at any court-martial as 'defendant's friend' and defence witness. No more was heard of the proposal.Kennedy, p.
The Constitutional Court therefore had to decide whether the magistrate's court and the High Court had acted correctly in broadening the definition of the common-law crime of rape on the ground that the old definition had been unconstitutional.
A Board of Inquiry ruled that Georgians commanding officer had acted correctly. Lt. Phillimore's parents lived at Swinbrook, Oxfordshire, England. There is a memorial to P.514s officers and men in the Church of England parish church of St. Mary the Virgin in Swinbrook.
The board announces that analysis of the port engine, now recovered from the river, confirms Sully's account that it was disabled by the bird strikes. The board concludes that Sullenberger acted correctly in selecting the best of the options available to him, which in the event saved the lives of everyone aboard.
On 23 November 2009, two Atlantic City policemen stopped two men on the street and detained them. The two officers reportedly made racial insults directed toward the men. An internal affairs investigation found the officers acted correctly. In October 2011, the two officers agreed to pay $360,000 to the men for violating their civil rights.
Endrass claimed that Captain Eric Jones and his crew "lost their heads completely" at the shot across the bows from his U-boat. Jones was an experienced captain. The Luimneach had survived twelve aerial attacks during the Spanish Civil War. Following an inquiry on 4 March 1941, Dönitz concluded that the U-boat acted correctly in sinking an abandoned ship.
Minstrella was awarded the race whilst Forest Flower was disqualified and placed last. Timeform described the decision as "unjust", but pointed out that the committee had acted correctly according to the rules of racing. In 2010 a Racing Post correspondent described the 1986 Cheveley Park Stakes as "one of the most controversial Group I races of the last 25 years".
Tovey stated that the two officers had acted correctly, ensuring that the German ships were tracked and not endangering their ships needlessly. Furthermore, Prince of Waless main guns had repeatedly malfunctioned and she could not have matched Bismarck. Tovey threatened to resign his position and appear at any court-martial as 'defendant's friend' and defence witness. No more was heard of the proposal.
The view was taken that they were wrong not to have continued the battle with Bismarck after Hood had sunk. John Tovey, Commander-in-Chief of the Home Fleet, was appalled at this criticism. A row ensued between Tovey and his superior, Admiral Sir Dudley Pound. Tovey stated that the two officers had acted correctly, not endangering their ships needlessly and ensuring that the German ships were tracked.
Whilst serving as Minister of State for Immigration, O'Brien had to deal with the 2001 Hinduja affair. His testimony that Peter Mandelson had telephoned him on behalf of S P Hinduja, who was at the time seeking British citizenship, led to Mandelson's resignation. An independent enquiry by Sir Anthony Hammond came to the conclusion that Mike O'Brien had acted correctly and neither Mandelson nor anyone else had acted improperly.
The Report stated that it was the most complex, wide-ranging and onerous investigation ever undertaken by the Office.Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration, Annual Report 1988-89, pp. 22-23 The case attracted unprecedented press and Parliamentary attention, with between 150 and 200 MPs contacting the Office. Nicholas Ridley, who had replaced Young as Secretary of State, rejected the main thrust of Barrowclough's findings and claimed that departmental officials had acted correctly on external advice.
On 9 March 1943, during a meeting, Hitler told Goebbels that he acted "correctly" as he understood the "psychological" reasons for the Rosenstrasse protests. Having praised Goebbels for "having done the right thing", Hitler added he still expected Goebbels to make certain the Jews of Berlin "disappeared", if just not right now. The Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler, though he intensely disliked Goebbels, also approved of releasing the Jews held on the Rosenstrasse.
The case concerned a transsexual person from New York City who had undergone sex reassignment surgery and wanted a change of name and sex on their birth certificate. The New York City Health Department refused to grant the request, and the court ruled that the New York City and New Jersey Health Code only permitted a change of sex on the birth certificate if an error was made recording it at birth, so the Health Department acted correctly.
The girls decided not to appeal their suspension. They agreed they had been insubordinate, but the incident was widely reported and the original order criticized as an act of censorship. Many students protested the punishment to no avail. However, many students also protested the media's portrayal of the situation, believing that the school had acted correctly and that the girls deserved to be punished for their insubordination, for they had previously agreed not to say the word.
Yarberry insisted he had been "railroaded", and that he had acted correctly and in self-defense. On September 9, 1882, Yarberry and three others escaped from the Santa Fe, New Mexico jail, and he quickly found that a $500 bounty had been placed on him. The other prisoners were captured quickly, and Santa Fe County Sheriff Romulo Martinez organized a posse to hunt down Yarberry. On September 12, 1882, a posse led by Santa Fe Police Chief Frank Chavez captured Yarberry twenty eight miles outside of town.
Therefore, all rights to further appeals were forfeited. The ruling was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court on November 30 of that same year, while Macdonald was serving his federal sentence at FCI Sheridan, Oregon. The courts ruled that Dupree had acted correctly when he refused to let the jury see a transcript of the 1970 Article 32 military hearing, and, because this was not an insanity trial, he had also acted properly in not allowing the jurors to hear any of the psychiatric testimony.
The case concerned a transsexual person from New York City who had undergone sex reassignment surgery and wanted a change of name and sex on their birth certificate. The New York City Health Department refused to grant the request, and the court ruled that the New York City and New Jersey Health Code only permitted a change of sex on the birth certificate if an error was made recording it at birth, so the Health Department acted correctly. The decision of the court in Weiner was affirmed in Mtr. of Hartin v. Dir.
Both stated that they had acted correctly. In April 2020 Electric Kiwi complained to the Electricity Authority that competitor Genesis Energy were breaching the New Zealand Government Electricity Pricing Review Panel's ban on 'Win Backs', a practice where customers would be offered a better deal by their electricity retailer if they said they would leave. Genesis admitted fault and apologized. On May 16 while New Zealand was in isolation at home during the COVID-19 epidemic, Electric Kiwi sponsored the 'Jam on Toast' live music festival, streamed online through Facebook.
It identified irregularities in the affairs of Barlow Clowes which dated back to the 1970s and held that the Department had committed five acts of maladministration. It was concluded that if departmental officials had examined the affairs of the business properly in 1985 on the basis of the warnings the Department had received, it was a virtual certainty that they would have closed Barlow Clowes down. Nicholas Ridley, who had replaced Young as Secretary of State, rejected the main thrust of Barrowclough's findings and claimed that departmental officials had acted correctly on external advice.
Only if sufficient extra units and security is available, can a decision be taken, in exceptional situations, to launch an attack from the inside. The report concluded that the fatal fire that took place on 9 May 2008 at De Punt should challenge and encourage the Dutch fire fighting authorities to again invest on an ongoing basis in its core activity, namely professional expertise when it comes to fighting fires. Stating this incident was not simply a case of “normal professional risk” but rather an avoidable incident. In the opinion of the investigative committee, the fire officers involved acted correctly.
For much of the series, Cadfael is only partly sure that he acted correctly when dealing with the saint's relics. He admits his actions in 1141 to his friend, Sheriff Hugh Beringar, in The Pilgrim of Hate, the tenth book in the series. In that book he concludes that his actions are vindicated when he witnesses a miraculous healing at Winifred's shrine in Shrewsbury Abbey. In The Holy Thief, St. Winifred's coffin is stolen from the Abbey, and Cadfael lives in fear that the coffin will be opened and the deception discovered; he is much relieved when the coffin is eventually returned intact.
After admitting to not keeping proper records in 2001 and 2002, one doctor at an office location in Manhattan was placed on probation for five years by the New York state Health Department, and was no longer allowed to treat patients with erectile dysfunction, premature ejaculation and other sexual problems. John Henry Howard v. Boston Medical Group trial of September 2009 was successfully appealed in favor of Boston Medical Group and decided on July 12, 2011 by the Georgia Court of Appeals noting that proper instruction was ignored by the patient and that Boston Medical Group acted correctly to ensure proper patient care.John Henry Howard v.
A report written by Nina Stewart for the President's Foreign Advisory Board concurs with Gates and refutes the previous CIA reports, concluding that further analysis shows that the Soviets were, in fact, genuinely fearful of US aggression. The decision of Gen. Perroots was described as "fortuitous", noting "[he] acted correctly out of instinct, not informed guidance," suggesting that had the depth of Soviet fear been fully realized, NATO may have responded differently. Some historians, including Beth A. Fischer in her book The Reagan Reversal, pin Able Archer 83 as profoundly affecting President Reagan and his turn from a policy of confrontation towards the Soviet Union to a policy of rapprochement.
Bellotti upon Statutory Limitations on Corporate Referendum Spending; Fox, Francis H.17 Ga. L. Rev. 677 (1982-1983) Buying Back the First Amendment: Regulation of Disproportionate Corporate Spending in Ballot Issue Campaigns; Easley, Allen K. Lawyer Francis H. Fox wrote, "[the ruling] perceives that the First Amendment's purposes are better served by allowing the [free] use of means of communication than by enacting legislation designed to foster equality of access to those means." Prentice also noted that the Court acted correctly by protecting the rights of listeners to hear all possible pertinent information. This is the "right to receive" doctrine, which interprets the First Amendment as protecting individuals' right to receive information as part of freedom of communication.
Similarly, Niklas Zetterling and Michael Tamelander have judged that although "the British were not fully aware that the Germans had written off Tirpitz as an offensive weapon in autumn 1944, their final efforts appear almost overzealous". The official history of British intelligence in World War II states that Dönitz's use of the battleship to tie down Allied resources was successful, and "in her last days she briefly excelled" in this role. Other historians believe that the attacks were justified. Sweetman has written that while the Allied intelligence services erred in believing that Tirpitz could be repaired and returned to service following Operation Paravane, the British leadership acted correctly on the information available to them by ordering further attacks.
The two players received support from their teammates, who held a club meeting on the Sunday where they unanimously agreed that the action of the committee was unconstitutional. Some of them had earlier considered pulling out of their game against Carlton that weekend, in protest. More than 2000 club supporters held a demonstration after the Carlton game, backing Icke and Grambeau. On the next Tuesday, the two players appeared before the North Melbourne committee and were reinstated on the club's training list, after signing a statement which said that the "committee of the North Melbourne Football Club acted correctly in dispensing of our services" and expressed a desire to "withdraw and apologise for statements made by us to the press".
The bodies of the crew members "had lethal-level injuries caused by ground impact." The official NASA report omitted some of the more graphic details on the recovery of the remains; witnesses reported finds such as a skull, human heart, a portion of an upper torso, and parts of femur bones. All evidence indicated that crew error was in no way responsible for the disintegration of the orbiter, and they had acted correctly and according to procedure at the first indication of trouble. Although some of the crew were not wearing gloves or helmets during reentry and some were not properly restrained in their seats, doing these things would have added nothing to their survival chances other than perhaps keeping them alive and conscious another 30 or so seconds.
On the next Tuesday, the two players appeared before the North Melbourne committee and were reinstated on the club's training list, after signing a statement which said that the "committee of the North Melbourne Football Club acted correctly in dispensing of our services" and expressed a desire to "withdraw and apologise for statements made by us to the press". The reason for Icke and Grambeau being sacked was not revealed to the public, but was believed to be because the committee felt that they had not tried hard enough in the St Kilda game. Icke went straight back into the North Melbourne team, which played Collingwood in round 13. He played out the 1955 season, then in 1956 was cleared to Wimmera Football League club Minyip, as playing coach.
Swiss security forces reportedly came close twice to carrying out the operation. According to Swiss MP Jakob Buechler, head of the Swiss Parliament's Defense Committee the operation was imminent, and could have ended in a "total disaster".Switzerland considered sending special forces into Libya to rescue citizensPresident Doris Leuthard has said the Swiss authorities acted correctly in considering plans for a military operation to free two Swiss hostages detained in Libya In February 2010, the dispute with Switzerland spread, with Libya refusing to issue entry visas to nationals of any of the countries within the Schengen agreement, of which Switzerland is a part. This action was apparently taken in retaliation for Switzerland blacklisting 188 high-ranking officials from Libya by adding them to the Schengen Area visa blacklist, a move supported by some Schengen countries, but criticised by Italy as an abuse of the system.
Michal runs out and talks to a woman looking like his wife. Later, talking with his father, the conversation becomes surreal as his father says he has never heard of "that man" before, and Michal says he "later only saw him once, from a window", and then a brutal roundup of people on the streets by SS and Wehrmacht is seen through a window, and a man tearing up a paper from his pocket before all are herded into trucks, Michal runs to the woman with a baby and says he saw a "him" being taken away and she says Michal now must provide for her and the child. Michal is then again shown talking to his father who tells him "there is nothing to save, the world has vanished" and that he must "fathom the new laws that govern the decay" and adjust himself to them, and that that's why Michal has "acted correctly but cruel", to which Michal says he can redeem anything he did, "even the presence of our children in this world". At the lab he sees his wife again but when he blinks it turns out it was a random nurse.
According to the BBC, the villagers of Asira al-Qubliya point out that it was their fields that were burned, and that the fire was much closer to their own village than to the Jewish settlement. The Israeli military issued a statement saying that it was investigating, and that "it appears that the video in question does not reflect the incident in its entirety". A week later, a Palestinian was shot and wounded by a settler from Yitzhar in clashes which started when a group of settlers set fire to fields belonging to the Palestinian village of Urif. In early June 2012, police opened a criminal investigation into two shootings, in which members of the Yitzhar rapid response security team opened fire in the direction of Palestinians during clashes between settler youths and local Palestinians, and confiscated weapons from five members of the security team. The Israeli NGO B’Tselem, which released video footage of both incidents, accused the IDF and Border Police of refusing to make settlers leave the area and of not acting to protect the Palestinians, but an IDF investigation found that the soldiers had acted correctly.

No results under this filter, show 62 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.