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128 Sentences With "admit guilt"

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

Not all plea deals require that a defendant admit guilt.
He won't admit guilt and he won't surrender his office.
So she couldn't really, even if she wanted to, admit guilt.
He is the second trader to admit guilt in the probe.
It was not immediately clear to which charges Bruce might admit guilt.
That would effectively force Mr. Kraft to admit guilt in the case.
He refused to admit guilt and accept a plea of life-without-parole.
This is why companies typically settle such cases, often without the need to admit guilt.
Conyers did not admit guilt as part of the monetary settlement with the former staffer.
But Mr. Liu refused to admit guilt as a condition for release, Mr. Shang said.
But to do so he would have to admit guilt, and he has maintained his innocence.
The settlement doesn't require Trump to admit guilt and he maintains that he didn't mislead his students.
The Journal report said the bank is expected to admit guilt, but not to be charged criminally.
French authorities had initially discussed a penalty of 40 - 100 million euros, provided the bank admit guilt.
Some defendants, especially the young or mentally impaired, can be pushed to admit guilt when they are innocent.
A no contest plea means the accused does not admit guilt but agrees not to dispute the charges.
This would force them to effectively admit guilt even though they have pleaded not guilty to the charges.
This would effectively force them to admit guilt even though they have pleaded not guilty to the charges.
The Commissions lawyer -- who was extremely aggressive at the hearing -- tried cutting a deal ... admit guilt and pay $2,500.
They ultimately signed a consent degree in which they did not admit guilt, but agreed to desegregate their properties.
In settling the suit, Uber had to give Waymo $245 million in equity but it did not admit guilt.
The mystery of the mix-up was solved when PwC accountants stepped forward to admit guilt for the envelope swap.
" • Some of his sources "expressed concern that Facebook may not have had to admit guilt as part of the settlement.
That's why his clients often need to admit guilt, take a plea agreement and work with the government, he said.
A no-contest plea allows a defendant to not admit guilt but acknowledge that there&aposs enough evidence for a conviction.
The witness, Louis Martin "Marty" Blazer III, signed a plea agreement last week to admit guilt to five federal criminal charges.
Plea bargains, which do not always require the defendants to admit guilt, aren't at all unusual in the U.S. criminal justice system.
Schoolbooks tell us that Germany was humiliated: forced to give up territory, pay huge reparations, and admit guilt for starting the war.
This shouldn't be swept under the rug with a settlement that doesn't even require him to pay back what he took or admit guilt.
"I admit guilt on all charges and deeply regret my action," Choi told reporters following the verdict, which he does not plan to appeal.
He was released in 213, but on the condition that he admit guilt, which made it impossible for him to get a decent job.
Two people briefed on the matter confirmed the Post report the FTC will not require Facebook to admit guilt as part of the settlement.
But Mr. Kraft and many of the other men are unwilling to admit guilt because they believe the police mishandled aspects of the case.
Bryant did not admit guilt in the incident, but he did issue a statement through his attorney in which he apologized to the woman.
While Parker didn't admit guilt, he showed considerable empathy in a conversation that touched on, among other difficult subjects, masculine identity, consent and rape culture.
Pleading no contest has essentially the same effect as a guilty plea, as the defendant agrees not to dispute the charges, but does not admit guilt.
"We're not asking them to admit fault, or to admit guilt, or even admit that there is anything wrong," Ms. Blackwell said in a phone interview.
In December, Odebrecht signed a leniency accord with prosecutors, agreeing to pay 6.7 billion reais ($1.9 billion), admit guilt and offer details of bribes it paid.
But Mr. Kraft and many of the other men are unwilling to admit guilt because they believe that the police have mishandled aspects of the case.
Prosecutors also generally require defendants avoiding prosecution in such cases to admit guilt or acknowledge that prosecutors would prevail in the case at trial, he said.
Most generally, severe sentences ratchet up the pressure on defendants to admit guilt and plead guilty to get a deal – whether or not they are actually guilty.
Katz, who also worked at Barclays, was the first person to admit guilt in the probe, and is scheduled to be sentenced on July 5, court records show.
Wu's refusal to bow to pressure or admit guilt likely explains his harsh sentence, said Kit Chan, Hong Kong-based director of China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group.
Nineteen-year-old Borden, from Ohio, took a type of plea Tuesday in which he didn't admit guilt but confessed that prosecutors have enough evidence to convict him.
The strategy leaned heavily on "transitional justice," which often involves leniency for those who admit guilt, truth commissions to investigate atrocities and the granting of reparations for victims.
Cosby told the NNPA that he believes he&aposll serve his full sentence because he won&apost admit guilt or remorse, which is usually prerequisites for early release.
COMPANIES ARE ALLOWED TO NOT ADMIT GUILT AND YET PAY THE FINE AND WE KEEP HEARING IF IT KEEPS GOING WE'RE GOING TO RATCHET UP BUT IT NEVER HAPPENS.
Santander Consumer will pay a $2.5 million fine and provide about $9.3 million in refunds to some drivers although the lender did not admit guilt, according to the settlement.
He hailed his former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, who pleaded guilty to multiple counts of bank and tax fraud, as a "brave man" after his initial refusal to admit guilt.
After filmmaker Micki Dickoff investigated the crimes and argued Jacobs's innocence, the Broward County State Attorney offered Jacobs's a plea deal that would allow her freedom without making her admit guilt.
Borden entered an Alford plea to malicious wounding in 2018, according to AP.  He did not admit guilt but accepted that prosecutors had enough evidence to convict him of a crime.
That will have little direct impact on Och-Ziff because it avoided having to admit guilt while its wholly owned subsidiary can simply cease operations – if it has not done so already.
He can offer pardons only to specific perpetrators, and each must then choose whether to accept the pardon and thereby admit guilt (albeit without punishment), or reject the pardon and deny guilt.
In August, Cohen appeared there before Judge William Pauley to admit guilt on eight criminal counts including tax fraud, excessive campaign contributions, making false statements to a financial institution and unlawful corporate contributions.
The final episode of the Netflix series showed that Ward is so determined to prove his claims of innocence that he wouldn't admit guilt even if it would help his chances of getting parole.
When America's Supreme Court gave its seal of approval to plea bargains in 1970, it did so on the understanding that they would not be used to press innocent defendants falsely to admit guilt.
Alito said that faced with "an incredible and uncorroborated defense," English had warned his client -- months in advance -- that the only viable strategy was to admit guilt and concentrate on avoiding the death penalty.
To be sure, defendants who admit guilt are stained with criminal convictions, forego liberties including the right to vote, put their jobs and reputation at risk — and can still wind up with tough sentences.
Businessman William Yan last year struck a deal with police to forfeit a record NZ$42 million ($29 million) in assets allegedly obtained through fraud in China, but did not admit guilt at the time.
"If one day in the future I admit guilt — whether in writing or in a video or voice recording — that will not be a true expression of my thoughts," Mr. Xie said in that letter.
The sentence was part of a guilty Alford plea she entered in March to first-degree manslaughter, in which she did not admit guilt but acknowledged that prosecutors had enough evidence to convict her, WFSB reports.
The disgraced "Cosby Show" star used the interview to profess his innocence, saying he expects to serve his full sentence because he won&apost admit guilt or remorse for the 2004 sexual assault of Andrea Constand.
Both Democrats also objected to the FTC's decision not to require Facebook to admit guilt, and its broad waiver of any future claims for violations the company or its officers might have committed since June 2012.
Michael's Alford plea, though technically a kind of guilty plea, did not officially resolve the underlying questions: In court, he acknowledged prosecutors had enough evidence to convict him but he did not admit guilt to their accusations.
There is generally no requirement that the Church admit guilt and there's no guarantee that evidence of sexual abuse will ever be made public, or that anyone in the Church will be held accountable after the settlements.
Mr. Rashbaum approached Mr. Histed with a proposal: Mr. Baker would admit guilt and accept a 20-year prison sentence, with no chance for parole, if the prosecutors did not object to him being transferred to Canada.
As part of the agreement, the generic pharmaceutical company headquartered in Princeton, New Jersey will admit guilt and pay the penalty, which the Justice Department says is the largest fine the department had levied in a domestic antitrust case.
A cross-party committee led by an ally of Mr Temer is considering measures to limit the use of plea bargaining, for example by setting a minimum jail sentence for people who admit guilt in exchange for testimony against others.
And secondly, Facebook will not have to admit guilt as part of the settlement — a not uncommon outcome in FTC settlements that may nonetheless add to the perception that Facebook has been able to avoid meaningful punishment for its alleged transgressions.
Under the settlement, Musk and Tesla would've paid fines of tens of millions of dollars, Tesla would've added a couple of independent board members, Musk wouldn't have had to admit guilt, and he would've lost his chairmanship for two years.
Why would he put out a statement of apology suggesting he was in the picture soon after it was published, only to rescind it the next day, and then admit guilt of using blackface in an attempt to impersonate Michael Jackson years earlier?
Blackmon submitted an Alford plea — which lets a defendant acknowledge that prosecutors have enough material to forward a conviction but doesn't require the defendant to admit guilt — even though there was no physical evidence linking him to the scene of the crime.
A guilty plea by a subsidiary would be a reputational black eye for Goldman, which has taken pride in never having to admit guilt in a federal investigation — although a number of other big banks have had subsidiaries do so without any lasting impact.
One of the most prolific serial killers in American history, Ted Bundy defended himself at his murder trials in 1979; one of the lawyers assigned to advise him said he simply could not relinquish control, or admit guilt in return for a life sentence.
He is now the first member of the Trump White House to face criminal charges and admit guilt in the wake of special counsel Robert Mueller's on-going investigation, which is focusing on possible collusion between Trump and Russian officials to affect the outcome of the 2016 U.S. election.
The so-called Alford plea arranged by his defense attorneys and prosecutors — which does not admit guilt but carries the same weight, and cannot be appealed — would assess 15 years for facilitation of first-degree murder, and 35 years for aggravated kidnapping, to be served concurrently, The Jackson Sun reports.
Under the terms of a so-called Alford plea deal — in which a defendant doesn't admit guilt to a crime itself, but admits that there is enough evidence that they may be found guilty if their case goes to trial — Johnson accepted a sentence of 10 years but could be eligible for parole much sooner.
In late 2018, according to HBO, Frosh offered Syed a plea deal for his conviction that would have required him to admit guilt and serve an additional four years in prison. Syed rejected the deal.
They were transferred to the hearing with their possessions. The plea deal did not technically result in a full exoneration; some of the convictions would stand, but the men would not admit guilt. The counsel representing the men said they would continue to pursue full exoneration.
In it, he admitted to giving alcohol to children, but refused to admit guilt in the production of child pornography, rape and murder. After November 8, 2011, a message appeared in the media about Krotov's death, but this was unconfirmed. In 2015, Krotov tried to unsuccessfully appeal his sentence.
After a man is accused of a crime he did not commit, his lawyer is against taking the case and does nothing to help him. Pressure politically is aiding in finding the man guilty, and he is forced to admit guilt. He then fights to prove his innocence.
Ballance did not admit guilt. As announced in an April 2008 release by the United States Department of Justice (USDOJ), MDC and its two owners reached a settlement with the USDOJ. The company paid back $5 million and added $5 million in fines. The chain did not admit to any wrongdoing.
Cole was convicted by a jury of rape, primarily based on the testimony of the victim. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison. While incarcerated, he was offered parole if he would admit guilt, but he refused. Cole died in prison on December 2, 1999, during an asthma attack.
After the surrender of the Japanese in August 1945, she was offered but rejected an evacuation by the Japanese. She was arrested by the order of Chiang Kai-shek on 25 August and charged with treason. She refused to admit guilt. In 1949, she was imprisoned in Shanghai when the Communist took over the city.
Most of the accused did not admit guilt. Some of those who did came up with the excuse that they needed the money provided by Soviet communists to improve their life. Of 149 defendants, 88 declined a lawyer. Not all defendants were present in the courtroom, and some had to be removed as they started to protest.
On 12 March 2002, Viktor Malyuk was detained on suspicion of committing four murders. Throughout the investigation and at the trial the murderer did not admit guilt in any way, and wrote many complaints to all instances. The forensic psychiatric examinations recognized Malyuk as sane and responsible for his actions. On 26 December 2003, the Moscow City Court sentenced him to life imprisonment.
Ephram agrees to try to make more time on his part, and they make up. Bright gets a job at the County Clerk's office with his mother Rose. Never known for his monogamy, his promiscuity catches up to him when one young intern accuses him of sexual harassment. During the investigation Bright maintains that she misunderstood his actions and does not admit guilt.
He did not admit guilt even at the trial, continuing to claim that he was provoked in each case. In 2006, he was sentenced to 25 years in prison. However, the relatives of the victims and the regional prosecutor's office appealed this decision. In 2008, he was sentenced to life imprisonment by the court, which he will serve in a special regime colony.
Years later, a civil court ruled against one of the officers and he was ordered to pay a fine to Pollard's family of $5,000 ($62,000 each of the rest of the families). Temple's family sued the city of Detroit for wrongful death but the city would not admit guilt. Cooper's starter pistol was never found. Hysell left Detroit, raised four children, and now works as a hairdresser.
Hunt's defense attorney gained a change in venue for his client's trial, as the case had been widely publicized in the Winston-Salem and Forsyth County areas. "Faced with a retrial in rural Catawba County, prosecutors offered a plea bargain to Hunt that would have set him free. Rather that admit guilt, Hunt turned down the deal." The same eyewitnesses testified, as did two jailhouse informants.
He was subsequently charged with "felony assault and battery and threatening to commit a crime"; a police officer found bruises and scratches on the woman. In March 1994, Leykis was sentenced to a year of probation and ordered to attend a domestic violence class. He completed both, and the charges were dropped, although Leykis did not admit guilt as part of the agreement. The couple have since divorced.
Plea decisions are critical to Criminal Justice System, by providing incentives for those who have committed crimes to admit guilt, in order to prevent the stress placed on victims. Those who plead guilty can see sentences reduce by a third, or gain access to interventions which seek to keep them out of prison altogether. An example case study can be found in the Humberside Adult Female Triage pilot.
Women's souls were seen as unprotected in their weak and vulnerable bodies. Several factors may explain why women were more likely to admit guilt of witchcraft than men. Historian Elizabeth Reis asserts that some likely believed they had truly given in to the Devil, and others might have believed they had done so temporarily. However, because those who confessed were reintegrated into society, some women might have confessed in order to spare their own lives.
Green was offered a plea deal in which he would admit guilt and receive no more than 22 years. He refused to take the deal asserting that he did not kill Charles Flynn. On September 5, 1990, After 3 hours of contemplation, the all-white jury found Green guilty offirst-degree murder and he was sentenced to death. In 2019 the U.S. Middle District Court of Florida deemed this ruling to be unconstitutional.
In October 2013, Infosys agreed to settle the civil suit with US authorities by paying US$34 million. Infosys refused to admit guilt and stressed that it only agreed to pay the fine to avoid the nuisance of 'prolonged litigation'. In its statement the company said "As reflected in the settlement, Infosys denies and disputes any claims of systemic visa fraud, misuse of visas for competitive advantage, or immigration abuse. Those claims are assertions that remain unproven".
While Sneed pleads innocence back at the police station, claiming that the cash was his own (having switched the incriminating notes with Oscar), Benedetto is shot dead by Tallbear, eliminating Berrigan's only witness. Sneed's gun is returned to him and he goes to Manso's estate with several other officers, but Sneed refuses to admit guilt and Sneed gives in. Later, Tallbear informs Sneed that the price of Benedetto's murder is "fifty percent of everything." Sneed then reveals that he's been promoted to captain.
In 1935, James Rand Jr. was accused by the Securities and Exchange Commission of stock manipulation. Rand signed a consent decree in late May 1935 in which he did not admit guilt but did agree to stop stock purchases which would manipulate the share price of Remington Rand."Misconduct Laid to Rand Officials," New York Times, May 25, 1935; "Denial By J.H. Rand Jr.," New York Times, May 26, 1935. In 1937, Rand founded the electric shaver division of Remington Rand.
Maslovskaya was arrested in 1922 and her trial began in May 1923. Along with the others arrested, the Process of the 45 took place in Białystok District Court, with Masolovskaya taking full responsibility, stating that she was the sole organizer of the group. She did not admit guilt, stated that their intent was not to foment armed insurrection, but to fight for Belarusians to have their own nation. She was sentenced to six years in prison, to be served in Białystok and Warsaw.
He became embroiled in controversy when was one of the members to hold Speaker John Finch in his chair to prevent him adjourning parliament and preventing Eliot from denouncing such measures as tonnage and poundage. For this Valentine and his associates were arrested and tried. The trial revealed the clash between the rights and prerogatives of parliament versus the king, and became a political storm. Valentine refused to admit guilt or comply with orders, and was eventually fined and imprisoned for a number of years.
To demonstrate "persistence" under the current legislation, two police officers must witness the activity and administer a non-statutory prostitute caution. This caution differs from an ordinary police caution in that the behaviour leading to a caution need not itself be evidence of a criminal offence. There is no requirement for a man or woman to admit guilt before being given a prostitutes caution and there is no right of appeal. Even if no criminal action is pursued, the caution remains on the individual's criminal record and may affect their future employment prospects.
British prime minister Lloyd George, Italy's Vittorio Emanuele Orlando, France's Georges Clemenceau, and Wilson at the Treaty of Versailles in 1919. At the peace conference at Versailles, Wilson tried with mixed success to enact his Fourteen Points. He was forced to accept British, French and Italian demands for financial revenge: Germany would be made to pay reparations that amounted to the total cost of the war for the Allies and admit guilt in humiliating fashion. It was a humiliating punishment for Germany which subsequent commentators thought was too harsh and unfair.
The Tenth Judicial Circuit provides family mediation services through Florida Supreme Court certified mediators. Court-connected mediation and arbitration services are among "essential" services to which litigants are entitled, due to a 2004 amendment to the state constitution. Teen Court is a program for juvenile offenders, with no or only a minor criminal history, to have their cases heard by local high school students, who are trained to perform the duties of defense attorney, prosecutor, clerk, and bailiff. The juvenile offender must admit guilt and agree to the sentence given by their peers.
He was acquitted, but received a fine. Since the dissolution of the Stasi in 1990, the Stasi Records Agency has worked to reassemble and organise the records held by the secret police and citizens have the right to request to see their own records. These documents have also been used to identify Stasi agents and informants. In 1999, Anderson's informant file was published He has faced criticism for refusing to apologise or admit guilt for his actions; several critics have remarked that his published works seem to excuse or gloss over his collaboration.
Women receive compensation only when their husbands leave them to legally marry another woman. Separation requires a payment generally by the party seeking divorce, the amount depending on the length of the marriage, except in the case of spouses separating to take vows of religious celibacy, and in the case of at-home spouses seeking divorce from absent spouses. Separation costs are otherwise imposed on violent spouses, on third parties who induce the divorce, and on wives who admit guilt in adultery. The divorce itself is presented as a deed of divorce ("yikthi").
The king had Maren brought to Copenhagen and tortured her, despite the fact that the law forbade torture of prisoners before they were judged. The torture made her admit guilt and accuse a number of other people as witches. The judgement was; "Because Maren Spliid personally and here before the court as well as in earlier confessions, said that she had used sorcery, and thereby misused the holy sacrament of communion, we found her as a sorceress, and on her life suffer fire and stake". In Denmark, witches were often burned alive at the stake.
North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (1970), was a case in which the Supreme Court of the United States affirmed that there are no constitutional barriers in place to prevent a judge from accepting a guilty plea from a defendant who wants to plead guilty while still protesting his innocence under duress as a detainee status. This type of plea has become known as an Alford plea, differing slightly from the nolo contendere plea in which the defendant agrees to being sentenced for the crime, but does not admit guilt. Alford died in prison in 1975.
J. P. NATHANSON FACES SUSPENSION FROM LAW in the New York Times on February 14, 1931 (subscription required) In September 1933, Nathanson was defeated by Aaron F. Goldstein when seeking renomination in the Democratic primary election.UPSETS ARE FEW IN ASSEMBLY LIST in the New York Times on September 20, 1933 (subscription required) On November 21, 1938, Nathanson pleaded guilty to subornation of perjury in another case of a fraudulent bail bond.THREE ADMIT GUILT IN BAIL BOND CASE; ONE EX-LEGISLATOR in the New York Times on November 22, 1938 (subscription required) On April 8, 1939, he was disbarred by the Appellate Division.
As part of the settlement, Rothenberg does not admit guilt but has agreed to be barred from the brokerage and investment advisory business with a right to reapply after five years. In August 2019, Deloitte completed a financial audit resulting in the SEC seeking over $31m in penalties from Mike Rothenberg. In January 2020, Mike Rothenberg was ordered to pay $31.4 million to settle a court ruling favoring the SEC allegations. Rothenberg was found to have funneled millions of dollars from investors to support his flashy lifestyle, building a race car team, and to fund a virtual reality studio.
This comes to a response to the two parties requesting the board for an "interlocutory" review on the grounds that inventory of the records were not relevant to the state's open records laws. The administrative trial could begin as early as August 17th but could be delayed due to this recent vote. In 2016, Des Moines County Attorney Beavers was found by the Iowa Public Information Board to have violated the Open Records Law after giving conflicting statements of accounts. She agreed to settle with the board to pay a $200 fine in exchange in not having to admit guilt.
Despite adamantly denying the claims against him, his self-aware bars admit guilt in allowing the game to get the best of him as he details the price he's paid for rash decisions over personally cinematic beats from the likes of Kaytranada, BADBADNOTGOOD and League of Starz. And in true lyrical Gibbs fashion, his pen paints a peephole into his time behind bars - from his inability to read the jail's German library books to Erica's decision to fly overseas to comfort him leading up to trial." Stephen Kearse of Paste Magazine highlighted Gibbs' lyrical content: "Gibbs’ greatest celebration of freedom is his rapping.
Police interrogation tactics can be classified into two general categories: maximization and minimization. Maximization techniques involve eliciting information from the suspect by emphasizing potential consequences for refusing to admit guilt, presenting false evidence, or accusing the suspect of having committed the act. Minimization techniques entail minimizing the suspect's hand in the crime and the associated consequences of his or her actions for the purposes of eliciting a confession. As a maximization tactic inspired by the Reid technique, presupposition-bearing questions (PBQs) are questions that interrogators may use to indirectly gain from suspects confirmation of incriminating information.
Baley is unexpectedly contacted by Daneel regarding a dispute between two reputable Spacers on board a ship, who have just submitted essentially identical papers about a revolutionary mathematical technique. Each claims they originated the idea, and approached the other for confirmation only to have them steal the concept and pass it off as their own. Neither will admit guilt and it would reflect badly on the ship's captain not to resolve the authorship prior to arrival at the planet where the papers are to be presented. Daneel suggests Baley, an unbiased outsider, to the desperate captain.
Her statement implicated a seventh person, Thomas Brown, as being involved as a witch; Brown was charged and incarcerated in the tolbooth but did not confess to any of the allegations. He died of starvation, a common occurrence among suspected witches who, like Brown, were confined for lengthy times. Confessions were obtained from Cornfoot and Lawson with Cornfoot later adding that the Devil had visited her while she was imprisoned. She claimed he promised her that she would only be kept incarcerated for a short period providing she did not admit guilt but threatened to "tear her to pieces" should she confess.
Bosnian Serb politician Biljana Plavšić pleaded guilty and admit guilt. She was sentenced to 11 years' in prison for persecution of non-Serbs. Ex-guards of the Keraterm camp were also convicted: Duško Sikirica was sentenced to 15 years, Damir Došen to 5 years and Dragan Kolundžija to 3 years for beatings, whereas the guards of the Omarska camp were also convicted: Zoran Žigić was sentenced to 25 years, Mlado Radić to 20 years, Miroslav Kvočka to 7 years imprisonment, Milojica Kos to 6 years and Dragoljub Prcać sentenced to 5 years imprisonment. Predrag Banović, who pleaded guilty to 25 charges, was sentenced to 8 years in prison.
The innocent prisoner's dilemma, or parole deal, is a detrimental effect of a legal system in which admission of guilt can result in reduced sentences or early parole. When an innocent person is wrongly convicted of a crime, legal systems which need the individual to admit guilt — as, for example, a prerequisite step leading to parole — punish an innocent person for their integrity, and reward a person lacking in integrity. There have been cases where innocent prisoners were given the choice between freedom, in exchange for claiming guilt, and remaining imprisoned and telling the truth. Individuals have died in prison rather than admit to crimes that they did not commit.
He was questioned by the campmaster, and due to the fact that he had no alibi for that particular evening and his apparent nervousness made the officer investigate his apartment. From this search, his knives were discovered, as well as the lighter he had kept as a trophy from Anastasia. He was subsequently arrested on December 13, 1982 by the Drama authorities. Papachronis refused to admit guilt on all charges at first, but the many inaccuracies, his erroneous answers, the heaps of recognitions from his victims, the lack of an alibi, and fatigue from the interrogations eventually led him to confess to everything he had done.
Kelly denies accusations of domestic violence, involvement in a "sex cult", and pedophilia in his lyrics, dismissing them as matters of opinion. Kelly does not admit guilt regarding the 2008 acquittal of his sex tape allegations, but maintains that he has been "falsely accused" and sings that his lawyer advised him to "don't say noth'". Although Kelly admits to casual sex with "both older and young ladies", he states that all of them were "over age". The lyrics denounce DeRogatis for profiting from his reports of Kelly's scandals, and John Legend, Steve Harvey, and Tom Joyner for refusing to publicly defend Kelly from his accusers.
After the arrest, the USMC demoted Brown to Captain and involuntarily retired him at that rank on February 1, 2006.Allen, "Convicted on Okinawa, Marine Brown in trouble in States", Johnson, "Flea market kidnapping case delayed for 2nd time". On August 14, 2009, Brown entered an Alford plea, meaning he did not admit guilt but did not contest that prosecutors had evidence to prove his guilt, and was convicted on a felony charge of attempting to commit kidnapping and a misdemeanor petty larceny charge in Cabell County, West Virginia Circuit Court. Brown was sentenced to three years probation, two years of which were to be spent in home confinement, and agreed to pay restitution and all court costs.
In 1933, with written support from a number of notable individuals including Cardinal O'Connell, Thomas Francis Lillis, Louis J. Gallagher, Edwin Stark Thomas, William Robinson Pattangall, Eugene N. Foss, Thomas C. O'Brien, Alfred E. Smith, James Roosevelt, 65 judges, and 3,470 attorneys, Coakley petitioned for reinstatement to the bar. Governor Joseph B. Ely appeared in court on Coakley's behalf. His petition was denied by Judge Fred T. Field on March 28, 1934. Field wrote that Coakley's "deliberate misstatements" regarding his disbarment and his offer to admit guilt in exchange for readmission while also asserting his innocence showed a "lack of respect for the truth inconsistent with fitness for readmission to the bar".
Refusing to partake in his own defense and refusing to co-operate with counsel he was said to have been offered a commutation on the condition that he admit guilt. He refused to do so and was given an uncommuted death sentence. Despite the maximum security of his prison situation, Grüner maintained an irregular correspondence with Irgun headquarters. Among the correspondence between Grüner and headquarters were: His refusal of Irgun assistance with legal counsel (owing to his principled stand regarding non-cooperation with the British court system in Eretz Yisrael), his query whether he should commit suicide in order to make a political statement (the Irgun leadership quickly responded against the initiative) and his final letter, written shortly before he was hanged.
In Michigan, "A nolo contendere plea does not admit guilt, it merely communicates to the court that the criminal defendant does not wish to contest the state's accusations and will acquiesce in the imposition of punishment." Lichon v American Universal Insurance Co., 435 Mich 408, 417 (1990). A nolo contendere plea may be appropriate "where the defendant would not be able to supply a sufficient factual basis for a guilty plea because he or she was intoxicated on the night of the incident, where there is the possibility of future civil litigation resulting from the offense, or where a defendant cannot remember the events which led to his or her being charged with a crime". 1A Gillespie Michigan Criminal Law & Procedure, § 16:15.
Xu was a teenage Red Guard at the time of the Cultural Revolution, He was a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences at the time of the Tiananmen massacre in 1989, and he tried in vain to persuade students to leave Tiananmen Square before the army suppression, as they refused to believe the soldiers would open fire on peaceful student protesters. Investigated after the protests as a student sympathiser, he refused to admit guilt. His career suffered as he was demoted as director of his research centre and remained so until his retirement, having been denied research funding and unable to supervise postgraduate student projects. Xu is an expert on Western social theories, including Marxism and the Frankfurt School, and a noted historian of the Cultural Revolution.
He resigned amid allegations that he had committed mail fraud when he tried to convince the U.S. Department of Education that he had paid off more than $20,000 in student loans. Miller was arrested June 8, 2006 on charges that he sent copies of doctored checks to the U.S. Department of Education to make it appear that he had paid off more than $20,000 in student loan debt to avoid garnishment of his pay. The U.S. attorney filed a warrant for Miller's arrest in U.S. District Court, charging him with making a false, fictitious or fraudulent statement and using the U.S. Postal Service to execute a scheme to defraud. When confronted in Atlanta with the copies of the checks archived by the Department of Education, Miller did not admit guilt but agreed to participate in an investigation, the complaint said.
The death penalty was the default sentence by North Carolina law at the time, if two requisites in the case were satisfied: the defendant had to have pleaded not guilty, and the jury did not instead recommend a life sentence. Had he pleaded guilty to first-degree murder, Alford would have had the possibility of a life sentence and would have avoided the death penalty, but he did not want to admit guilt. Nonetheless, Alford pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and said he was doing so to avoid a death sentence, were he to be convicted of first-degree murder, after attempting to contest that charge. Alford was sentenced to 30 years in prison after the trial judge accepted the plea bargain and ruled that the defendant had been adequately advised by his defense lawyer.
It did not admit guilt, but they agreed to refund $45 to anyone who purchased an Epson inkjet printer after April 8, 1999 (at least $20 of which must be used at Epson's E-Store). According to IDG News Service, Epson filed a complaint with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) in February, 2006, against 24 companies that manufactured, imported, or distributed Epson-compatible ink cartridges for resale in the U.S. On March 30, 2007, ITC judge Paul Luckern issued an initial determination that the ink cartridges in question did infringe upon Epson's patents. The judge also recommended those companies and others to be barred from manufacturing, importing, or reselling Epson cartridges in the U.S., said Epson. In 2015 it emerged that Epson printers reported that cartridges are empty when in fact 20% of their ink remains.
After being convicted of first degree murder on February 21, 1974, Witt was also sentenced to the death penalty. Witt appealed this sentence for five different issues which included the court not allowing evidence to prove insanity, the court's alleged use of non-record material in reviewing his sentence, the state forcing him to admit guilt before he was allowed the right to an attorney, and how the court relied on non-statutory aggravated circumstances however still sentenced him to capital punishment. All four of those mentioned claims were almost immediately thrown out. The only legitimate and significant appeal he made was his belief that the jury had been death qualified because three of the jurors were “improperly excluded for cause because of their opposition to capital punishment.” In a previous U.S. Supreme Court case, Witherspoon vs.
" The book Plea Bargaining's Triumph: A History of Plea Bargaining in America published by Stanford University Press defines the plea as one in "which the defendant adheres to his/her claim of innocence even while allowing that the government has enough evidence to prove his/her guilt beyond a reasonable doubt". According to the book Gender, Crime, and Punishment published by Yale University Press, "Under the Alford doctrine, a defendant does not admit guilt but admits that the state has sufficient evidence to find him or her guilty, should the case go to trial." Webster's New World Law Dictionary defines Alford plea as: "A guilty plea entered as part of a plea bargain by a criminal defendant who denies committing the crime or who does not actually admit his guilt. In federal courts, such plea may be accepted as long as there is evidence that the defendant is actually guilty.
Since 1999, the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) has set forth guidelines concerning the prosecution of business organizations and corporations.Corporate Prosecution Principles Resource Page The United States Attorneys' Manual (USAM) of the DOJ allows consideration of non-prosecution or deferred prosecution of corporate criminal offenses because of collateral consequences and discusses plea agreements, deferred prosecution agreements, and non-prosecution agreements in general.United States Attorneys' Manual § 9-28.1000 (2008) Collateral ConsequencesUnited States Attorneys' Manual § 9-16.325 (2008) Plea Agreements, Deferred Prosecution Agreements, Non-Prosecution Agreements and "Extraordinary Restitution" Under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, a past deferred prosecution will not count toward a defendant's criminal history, if there was no finding of guilt by a court and the defendant did not plead guilty or otherwise admit guilt in open court. This is in contrast to a deferred disposition, which typically does involve such a finding or admission.

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