Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"judicially" Definitions
  1. in a way that is connected with a court, a judge or legal judgement

127 Sentences With "judicially"

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

The investigation used judicially approved wiretaps, and began in 2015.
Lam's ordinance and are asking that it be reviewed judicially.
But several recent defense authorization acts exempted judicially ordered transfers.
Erdogan continued, vowing to "fight politically and judicially" against the arrests.
"Judicially, this is the closest thing to a suicide," he said.
"Gelatin formed as a result of the transformation of the bones, skin and tendons of a judicially impure animal is pure, and it is judicially permissible to eat it," the Islamic Organization for Medical Sciences ruled.
Husain was "extra-judicially killed in Rangers custody", MQM said in statement.
There are still unanswered questions even though it has been decided judicially.
Number -- it&aposs both -- its bit of nightmare judicially, it&aposs a nightmare politically.
"I can't accept it because judicially there is a presumption of innocence," Francis said.
They're judicially activists ... and make the choices which we did not write into the text.
According to Italian media, regulatory authorities in Italy think the acquisition is not "judicially acceptable".
That decision forced President Reagan to craft new policies based on judicially issued search warrants.
What's morally and judicially fair for us should be a reciprocated allowance for other nations.
They will hold feet to the fire and require prosecutors to meet with judicially-set deadlines.
That's why Justice Gorsuch asked the ACLU's lawyer if the court could judicially rewrite the statute.
What is created judicially often becomes public policy rendering all of our notes, observations, doubts, jottings, etc.
"When the Roberts Five saddles up, these so-called conservatives are anything but judicially conservative," he said.
Are the most patently farcical and protectionist restrictions nigh unchallengeable, or are there, in fact, judicially enforceable limits?
But it was unlikely to go beyond that because "the army never judicially punishes the corrupt," he said.
Let's put all negative attitudes aside because the negotiation will be — technically speaking, judicially speaking — very, very challenging.
"We consider Greece's demands over the occupation loan and war reparations legally active and judicially claimable," Pavlopoulos said.
But the 50,000 immigrants who would be on Hanen's list now have to worry about getting judicially doxxed.
"Holding Google to their privacy commitments is hard and it would need Mayo to intervene judicially," he says.
Administrative closure is only permitted when it is expressly authorized by a regulation or a judicially approved settlement.
The notion of a judicially enforceable right to free exercise was rejected by the Supreme Court in Reynolds v.
Certainly, 232 allows Commerce to take a broader view of national security that will be difficult to judicially challenge.
" Indeed, Chevron deference "is nothing more than a judicially orchestrated shift of power from Congress to the Executive Branch.
"No creditor can judicially execute on PDVSA properties, including Citgo," Jose Ignacio Hernandez, Guaido's overseas legal representative, wrote on Twitter.
Class actions are a judicially created mechanism to protect the "little guys" from abuse by powerful institutions, corporations, and governments.
In many ways, Chevron is nothing more than a judicially orchestrated shift of power from Congress to the executive branch.
Twelve states have certain protections for medical cannabis patients' in the workplace, eleven through statutes, and one, Massachusetts, judicially established.
His textualist approach steered the court away from judicially crafted multi-part tests that seemed more like statutes than judicial decisions.
The paperwork was later found by federal agents when they performed "a judicially authorized search" of Mr. Cohen's office, prosecutors said.
The findings, broad and devastating, led to a federal consent decree, a judicially enforced reform plan that is still in place.
During the Boxer rebellion in China he swindled a captive mandarin to gain control of mines there (an action later judicially overturned).
Could Trump have been partially right when he charged that Obama "tapped" him, except that the "tapping" would have been judicially approved?
If the justices were to find aid in dying legal, "I think it would be very influential, judicially and legislatively," he said.
Self-pardon is contrary to principles of the rule of law that are embedded in our Constitution and might be judicially rejected.
The Rangers initially said Husain died of a heart attack, but the MQM said Husain was "extra-judicially killed" in the force's custody.
In order for a case to be "pursued judicially" within the Jehovah's Witness Church, an accuser has to confront and charge their alleged abuser.
In many domains, U.S. law involves a complicated patchwork of legislation, regulation, and judicially-made case law that is not easily reduced to writing.
"Judicially rewriting sex discrimination in Title VII will spill over into other federal laws that prohibit sex discrimination," one brief defending the companies argues.
Appraisal is thus about finding a judicially determined "fair value" — the standard the court determines whether to award more money to a dissenting shareholder.
This is more or less smack in the middle of the Lochner era, a time when the courts were politically conservative and judicially aggressive.
Prince's siblings are likely in for a fight, even though they may have been judicially identified as heirs, and the law may be relatively straightforward.
Earlier on Tuesday, Italian daily la Repubblica reported that a potential takeover offer for Mediaset would not be "judicially acceptable" for AGCOM, without citing sources.
" If it were accepted, he said, "it ‎would‎ incorporate international law into the U.S. Constitution as a judicially enforceable constraint on Congress and the President.
But as judicially modest as these tasks might be, it is left to be seen whether the chief justice can accomplish them in this moment.
Their customary courtroom habitat, while seemingly rough and tumble, is actually a judicially protected environment where long-standing rules and traditions prohibit personal attacks on lawyers.
But the rule has been under a judicially-imposed nationwide stay since shortly after it was promulgated and cannot be rescinded or revised by the president.
The President's attorneys criticize what they believe are "limitless, suspicion-free, judicially-unquestionable investigations to find 'potential conflicts of interest,'" according to one recent legal brief.
Depending on how the justices rule, immigration authorities may soon either enjoy a freer hand to deport non-citizens or find themselves judicially constrained in these efforts.
"There's always someone judicially reviewing you," huffs one former Conservative chancellor, who, needless to say, did not attempt to nationalise Britain's utilities during his time in office.
The lead lawyer, Elizabeth Cabraser, said the amount was far less than the "judicially established benchmark" for class actions of approximately 25 percent of the settlement amount.
"As decades of fruitless efforts have proven, trying to identify 'judicially discernible and manageagble standards' for adjudicating generalized political grievances is an exercise in futility," he wrote.
The SEC used its judicially-created remedy to claw back funds earned from securities law violations regardless of how much time had passed since the violation occurred.
Second, EPA under the Obama administration issued a massive (and judicially upheld) "endangerment finding" that documented risks to human health and welfare posed by greenhouse gas emissions.
U.S. Circuit Judge Steven Colloton wrote that the lack of such a judicially enforceable federal right does not mean state officials have unlimited authorities to terminate Medicaid providers.
For years, Justice Scalia challenged the notion that the Constitution is a living document that can be judicially molded to changing times or the whims of the majority.
With Justice Kennedy's retirement, a solid five-justice conservative majority firmly shut the door in the Rucho case, saying that there were no judicially manageable standards to apply.
This judicially created doctrine holds that the federal courts should not intervene in some instances that involve "political questions" that should be resolved by the political process itself.
The Supreme Court at one time sought to impose judicially enforceable limits on that power, depriving elected representatives the ability to regulate various sectors of the national economy.
And those who put a legal veneer on judicially-sanctioned torture and murder shouldn't be the people interpreting our laws from the most vaunted bench in the land.
We're all these years after slavery, and blackness is still seen and codified—both judicially and culturally—as a crime: either crime happening or crime waiting to happen.
This rule against so-called "third-party standing" is simply a judicially crafted limitation that the Supreme Court has imposed on federal courts, not one mandated by the Constitution.
These colonial Writs required returns before judicial officers, and government searchers were subject to legislative penalties and even private lawsuits for exceeding the scope of the judicially authorized searches.
"The Court has simultaneously transformed judicially created rights like the right to abortion into preferred constitutional rights, while disfavoring many of the rights actually enumerated in the Constitution," Thomas wrote.
"A number of those who are detained in Syria by the Kurds have committed crimes in Iraq and may therefore, if necessary, be judicially tried on the spot," he said.
Mexico has announced justice reforms that would aid cooperation, including making it harder for criminals to delay extraditions and improving Mexico's ability to use judicially approved wiretaps in criminal cases.
He has also ordered a plan for how to sequester the military jury and how to get participants on and off the island during judicially approved breaks in the trial.
He has also ordered a plan for how to sequester the military jury and how to get participants on and off the island during judicially approved breaks in the trial.
In the ruling, he quoted the late Justice Antonin Scalia's view in 2004 that "there was no 'judicially discernible and manageable standard' by which to decide" when gerrymandering goes too far.
A potential takeover offer for Italian broadcaster Mediaset MS.MI by France's Vivendi would not be "judicially acceptable" for Italian communications authority AGCOM, daily la Repubblica reported on Tuesday, without citing sources.
It is not difficult to appreciate the court's reluctance to wade into the districting thicket, and to try to develop judicially manageable ground rules for reviewing the drawing of district lines.
It turned out that he couldn't achieve them judicially, either; the Federal District Court threw him out for lack of standing; whoever the agency fee might be injuring, it wasn't the governor.
Third, legislation to clear away confusing judicially-made exceptions to patentability could make it easier for important innovations to obtain the patent protection they deserve (particularly in life sciences and computer sciences).
Last year, MQM submitted a list of 46 members it says were killed extra-judicially by Rangers to the office of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, calling for the force to be more accountable.
"As Greeks, we consider these demands legally active and (can be) judicially pursued and should be solved in the competent European forum, judicial forum," Greek President Prokopis Pavlopoulos told Merkel during a short meeting.
"[The voters] and the dissent propose a number of 'tests' for evaluating partisan gerrymandering claims, but none meets the need for a limited and precise standard that is judicially discernible and manageable," he wrote.
The ad, which includes a clip of a judicially robed man ripping the Constitution, is set to appear for one week in a dozen states, according to the group, People for the American Way.
While campaign-trail rhetoric is increasingly bombastic, imprudent, and not necessarily rooted in objective facts, there is a critical line between campaign rhetoric and that rhetoric transforming into state action that requires judicially imposed recusal.
To take an extreme case, it would run counter to common sense if a church were judicially obliged to appoint a militant atheist as a priest, even if that candidate was well qualified on paper.
As I have written before, somewhere in America today there are tapes and transcripts of evidence obtained by the Feds through judicially approved warrants that probably include conversations between Russians and individuals close to Trump.
"Indeed, to hold otherwise would be to impermissibly and judicially create a right to appeal in a criminal matter that has not been authorized by our Legislature," Judge Stein wrote in her 25-page decision.
And in the meantime, it's a reminder that, despite the losses the Trump administration has suffered so far at the hands of mostly liberal judges, the ultimate outcome of the travel ban isn't yet judicially assured.
Because it was a policy which was typically, though not invariably, judicially enforced that lacked public authorization or buy-in, and that rested on certain premises about what equal educational opportunity amounted to that were eminently questionable.
He referred to it in 2016 as a "judicially orchestrated shift of power from Congress to the executive branch" and tried to craft a new exception to it while serving on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.
And so, Minsun Kim, the founder and president of a music conservatory on Long Island, assumed control on Monday as the one and only, judicially sanctioned 34th president of the Korean American Association of Greater New York.
Chief Justice Earl Warren knew the import of Brown v Board of Education and thought the stamp of a unanimous decision would put the issue to bed – not only judicially but in the court of public opinion.
"Judicially expanding the church-plan exemption to cover religiously affiliated entities", the brief reads, "would affect an enormous number of employees...many of whom do not share their employers' religious beliefs—and most of whom perform purely secular jobs".
He recited the plaintiff's citation of Stephen Miller's appearance on Fox News when Mr Miller, a senior adviser to Mr Trump, said the second ban promised the "same basic policy outcome for the country" as its judicially addled predecessor.
Dissenting from his colleagues on the D.C. Circuit, he argued that the government's efforts violated the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and chastised the panel majority for "judicially second-guessing the correctness or the reasonableness" of the plaintiffs' religious beliefs.
People held in correctional facilities are entitled to a judicially mandated standard of care, but no large-scale studies have been conducted to compare the quality of treatment provided by private companies with that provided by government-run services.
Paul Clement, a lawyer for North Carolina's Senate Redistricting Committee, argued in briefs that the Supreme Court has tried before to find a judicially manageable standard and has failed, and that the issue should rest with the political branches.
When you have to register by: October 28Qualifications for registration: You cannot be confined to a mental institution, judicially declared insane, under imprisonment, and you must be a US citizen resident of Guam at least 18 years old by Election Day.
In a Harvard Law Review article in 2016, Kavanaugh described the doctrine as "nothing more than a judicially orchestrated shift of power from Congress to the Executive Branch," suggesting he may be open to curbing or overturning Chevron if confirmed.
The government initially identified 102 children who fell in that category, but the number has fluctuated in recent days, as Sabraw's order has essentially functioned as a judicially mandated audit of the morass of systems used by different federal agencies.
The facts of the case are revealed gradually, and along the way Maja continually dwells on the kinds of questions that are, as her celebrity lawyer puts it, "not judicially relevant" — such as why she and Sebastian did what they did.
Common Cause held that federal courts could not get involved in policing partisan gerrymandering under the United States Constitution because there were no "judicially manageable" standards to separate out permissible from impermissible consideration of political party in drawing district lines.
When Trump was elected president, Kennedy told friends that he needed to await Trump&aposs nominee to replace Scalia to gauge whether the judicially untested Trump could be counted upon to choose a nominee of Kennedy&aposs liking and Scalia&aposs standing.
"Over the past five decades this Court has been repeat­edly asked to decide what judicially enforceable limits, if any, the Constitution sets on the gerrymandering of voters along partisan lines," Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in one of two cases decided on Monday.
"A last-minute, judicially-imposed change in the protocol at 5,300 polling places would be a recipe for delays and a disorderly election, as well-intentioned voters either took the perfectly posed selfie or struggled with their rarely used smartphone camera," Castel said.
" 'Judicially administered amputation' The State Department report notes that the Saudi prosecutor's office has "not named the suspects nor the roles allegedly played by them in the killing, nor had they provided a detailed explanation of the direction and progress of the investigation.
To try and imagine what that would be like, it would be useful to take a closer look at the DSS, the vigilantes who hunt down and kill ''criminals'' extra-judicially on behalf of Duterte, whether it's with his blessing, or even awareness, or not.
In 2000 a razor-thin margin in the key state of Florida (just 537 votes out of some six million cast there) led--under that state's own laws, operating within the overarching framework of judicially supervised federal law--to recounts and post-election litigation.
Ferrara also said that there was no reason to think Le Pen was being persecuted judicially because "the speed at which legal proceedings have been taken against Marine Le Pen is comparable to the pace of other proceedings in matters relating to the press and other media".
I see little sign of that, but I do think the energy behind the blockade of the Garland nomination is fueled by anxiety not only about what a more liberal court might do but in equal measure by what a judicially restrained court would not do.
Similarly, during the 1970s, lawmakers took credit for creating judicially enforceable rights to a healthy environment but structured the statutes so that the blame for the burdens needed to fulfill the rights and the failure to do so would fall on federal agencies and the states.
In 1971, in a case involving one of the largest school districts in North Carolina, the Supreme Court laid out the necessity of busing with striking clarity: Absent a constitutional violation, there would be no basis for judicially ordering assignment of students on a racial basis.
In 1971, in a case involving one of the largest school districts in North Carolina, the Supreme Court laid out the necessity of busing with striking clarity: Absent a constitutional violation, there would be no basis for judicially ordering assignment of students on a racial basis.
"A last minute, judicially imposed change in the protocol at 5,300 polling places would be a recipe for delays and a disorderly election, as well intentioned voters either took the perfectly posed selfie or struggled with their rarely used smartphone camera," Castel wrote in his 16-page decision.
"As part of the agreement, Motel 85033 will continue to enforce its guest privacy policy, which prohibits the sharing of guest information except in cases where a judicially enforceable warrant or subpoena is present, or local law requires this information," a spokesperson for Motel 6 told The Hill.
As my colleague Matt Ford had occasion to remark after Attorney General Bill Barr gave a speech to the Federalist Society, the Republican Party is deeply invested in furthering Trump's vision of maximal executive power, married to the judicially enabled characterization of resistance to conservative will as constitutionally illegitimate.
"Every time a human being is tortured, disappeared, extra-judicially killed, executed or arbitrarily arrested, Egypt's authorities convey a clear message to their people: the change they demanded will not come," EuroMed Rights, a Copenhagen-based network seeking to bolster ties between NGOs on both sides of the Mediterranean, said in a statement.
In another deviation from the entirety of American history, our current acting attorney general opined in 2014 about his legally ignorant and appalling view that the Supreme Court is an "inferior" branch of government and attacked the legal authority of the courts to judicially review the constitutionality of legislative and executive acts.
This will be taught in daylong courses and as a part of every course from driving skills to report writing, in an attempt at instilling the approach that goes beyond what any police department has tried, said Jonathan S. Aronie, who was judicially appointed to oversee the department's adherence to a federal consent decree.
Treating addiction as a disease, rather than a crime, they offer non-violent offenders the chance to avoid prison time by committing to an intensive, judicially supervised program of substance-abuse rehabilitation, random drug testing, regular court appearances and frequent mandatory attendance at "positive peer support" meetings, usually those of 12-step recovery groups.
It is neither judicially right or democratically wise for Republican justices to continue to vote along party lines in ways that advantage partisan Republicans by failing to protect the integrity of the right of Americans to vote, the integrity of financing the elections they vote in and the integrity of the districts in which they vote.
In the absence of constitutional and judicially-enforceable limitations on partisan gerrymandering, it is well within the realm of possibility that constitutional amendments, or even an entirely new constitution, could be enacted despite a lack of popular support, much less the kind of overwhelming popular support that, under any theory of democratic accountability, such dramatic changes should enjoy.
Its report also makes it clear that Vote Leave failed to co-operate with its investigation — including by failing to produce requested information and documents; by failing to provide representatives for interview; by ignoring deadlines to respond to formal investigation notices; and by objecting to the fact of the investigation, including suggesting it would judicially review the opening of the investigation.
If the ECHR's rights to life and respect (or the due process clause of the U.S. Constitution) mandate legislative and executive action to assure "a climate system capable of sustaining human life," as a federal district court judge in Oregon has ruled, they also could be found to mandate judicially determined levels of health care, housing, nutrition, education, transportation, you name it.
Erdogan is mad his guards face arrest for attacking protesters in D.C. Erdogan is mad his guards face arrest for attacking protesters in D.C. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is railing against the U.S. issuing arrest warrants Thursday against 12 members of his security detail for their role in a furious melee during his May visit to Washington, vowing to "fight politically and judicially" against the move.
As EPA explained in the 220006 final rule establishing the Midterm Evaluation process, a determination to maintain the current standards would be a final agency action, but a determination that the standards are not appropriate would lead to the initiation of a rulemaking to adopt new standards, and it is the conclusion of that rulemaking that would constitute a final agency action and be judicially reviewable as such.
My question though is if Brett Kavanaugh is solidly Conservative, he&aposs maybe not Scalia, a full on textualist but if he&aposs solidly Conservative, replacing someone who&aposs judicially Conservative I&aposm saying, is it that big of a swing as the left is saying, "This is a swing justice" Is it really, given especially last year&aposs opinions of this court where Anthony Kennedy was with the five-four majority on every opinion of great consequence?
Pharmacokinetics:  The aforementioned model filing is based on this cascade of causes-of-action: Anticipated sequellae: Concern that such a filing could yield a protracted battle that would ultimately have to reach the Supreme Court is misguided, for an injunction would stop Obama from releasing the funds in the interim and most all of the above bullet-points feed into the narrative that this out-of-control POTUS must be judicially restrained, per Marbury v. Madison.
Protestors yelled about the future of judicially invented rights while demanding a say in a confirmation process from which the Framers specifically excluded them, senators took turns grandstanding and issuing the first salvos of their presidential campaigns, and President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE tweeted about how "mean, angry and despicable" Democrats are.

No results under this filter, show 127 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.