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33 Sentences With "kidnaping"

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

Cummins was arrested on kidnaping charges, but it's not clear that those charges will stick.
Malaysia has also long suffered incursions by Philippine terror group Abu Sayyaf into the Sabah region, with attacks generally including kidnaping for ransom.
On a drowsy July afternoon of that year, he (or so it is believed by some) became America's first known victim of a kidnaping for ransom.
Vázquez González, a painter, suffered the kidnaping of three young relatives in January 2013 putting him on the road to becoming the leader of the vigilantes, known as autodefensas.
"Fingerprints Lead to Suspect in N.J. Kidnaping, Slaying", Associated Press, November 9, 1992.
His captors released him 12 hours later. Matiullah Jan has pointed fingers at security establishment for his kidnaping. .
Staff report. "Kidnaping in Vienna, Murder in Athens". Time, Vol. 107, No. 1, January 5, 1976, pp. 40-46.
The 1900 kidnaping of Edward Cudahy, Jr. in the Old Gold Coast neighborhood caused a national uproar. The perpetrator, Pat Crowe, became a nationally renowned author and lecturer on criminal justice reforms.
A warrant was issued for his arrest on a charge of kidnaping, but the child was returned to Los Angeles in advance of any legal action."A Kidnaping Case", San Francisco Chronicle, October 13, 1889, page 15 During the "long and expensive" divorce litigation, one of Louise's witnesses, Thomas Keys, was "spirited out of the county", but a private detective agency located him on a bee ranch in San Diego County, and he testified he was bribed by Otto Weyse and a "party named Jones", who was arrested. Mrs. Weyse won a divorce on July 10, 1890. In August 1892, Louise Weyse was granted an order by a Los Angeles court to change her legal name back to Louise Naud.
Someone calling himself the Basilisk is kidnaping people – mostly wealthy people, successful gamblers at a famous orbiting casino. They are later found dead with a small clay figure of a snake, curled into a letter B, on or near them. No one understands how this is being accomplished. Many think the Basilisk is Chan Derron.
Dixie is then kidnaped by Álvarez, but quickly manages to free herself. Jimmy persuades her to hide low as a publicity stunt and puts the "kidnaping" on page one. Dixie is found by Milton, who, by way of apology for ruining her stunt, finances her in a Broadway show written by Jimmy. The show is a success, and Jimmy and Dixie are married.
His wife, then held in custody for harboring her husband, told the police the names of Dillinger's gang upon her husband's death. She also confirmed that the Karpis-Barker gang was responsible for the January 1934 kidnaping of Edward Bremer, and named all of the gang members along with their girlfriends, leading to the issuing of federal indictments against them.
He was awarded the French Légion d'honneur in 1919. He had supported the Eighteenth Amendment but changed his attitude, recognizing that it was unenforceable and in his own observation had effects the very opposite of its purpose. His friendship with Col. Charles Lindbergh, with whom he was in daily contact after the tragic kidnaping at Hopewell, New Jersey, intensified his interest in the suppression of crime.
Thousands of European (peninsular) and overseas (criollos/creole) Spaniards participated in the War. While the war was taking place, the "Diputación Permanente del Reino" sort of the Council of the Regency, pending the kidnaping of the king, convoked the Spanish Parliament, which convened in Cadiz. This called for members of Parliament from all the kingdoms and captainships. O'Daly was elected as senior MP for his native Captainship General of Puerto Rico.
Willy Beyers, the company president, agrees to the concept, and the contest is launched. The contest is very successful, but Keene tires of creating a new pictogram in the waning weeks of the contest. He resumes his heavy drinking in bars. Wilton fears for her fiancé's future, hires a small-time hood, Softy Blane, to feign Keene's kidnaping so that while in the countryside he will finish the series of pictograms.
Soon, Gopi starts teasing Gandabherundam & Kanthamma. After a few comics incidents, in the village, Papa Rao sells-off Bhushaiah's house and necks them out when the couple moves in search of Gopi. Here Gandabherundam could not admit the dominance of Gopi, so, he calls Papa Rao who recognizes him. At present, they ruse by kidnaping Bhushaiah & Parvathamma and blackmails Gopi to discard from Amala's life which he does so.
The Owl started to re-establish his presence in the criminal underworld with the absence of the Kingpin. When Spider-Man visits him regarding information about the kidnaping of May Parker, the Owl says that Electro and the Vulture kidnapped her. This turns out to be a ploy by the Owl, who is after the two villains (hiring the Black Cat to find them) for stealing from him.Marvel Knights Spider-Man #3-4.
Kubi thinks that Bernd is the one who has kidnaped all of his friends and refuses to be the hero unless Bernd designs the game exactly like Kubi wants it to be. As the story continues it is hinted that Bernd even if he is the developer of the game is not almighty. The Shadow Plättchen gained power by killing small fairies called Pixel Flies and by kidnaping their king. With this power they got the ability to take influence on the game.
Gene Autry plays a singing ranch foreman who, as executor of the will of the property's owner, must ensure that Cody, the daughter/heiress (played by Hughes) doesn't marry without his approval. Cody wishes to marry Larry Cummings (Craig Reynolds), but Gene refuses, prompting Cummings to attempt to have Gene killed. When this fails, Cummings then demands money so Cody stages a fake kidnapping to raise the funds. However, her plan backfires after Cummings learns about it and turns it into a real kidnaping.
During the conflict Demetrio O'Daly was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General. As most people felt at the time, when king Ferdinand returned from exile and kidnaping, he repealed the Constitution of 1812, which as the rest of European monarchs, he felt was a Napoleonic maneuver to weaken the countries. But O'Daly was a defender of the Spanish Constitution of 1812 and was considered a rebel and exiled from Spain by King Fernando VII in 1814. In 1820 O'Daly, a liberal constitutionalist, together with fellow rebel Col.
She said that she had left the SLA due to death threats from DeFreeze: :Mary Alice Siem, 24, Redding, Calif., told authorities she and Thero Wheeler, 29, unofficially identified two months ago as a possible suspect in the Hearst kidnaping, left the terrorist organization last October because they disagreed with the SLA's violent tactics. :Miss Siem ... said she and Wheeler, who were living together, attended about 20 SLA meetings. ... :On one occasion she said she was threatened at gunpoint by DeFreeze, Miss Soltysik, and Miss Perry, but Wheeler intervened.
Witnesses were also presented who testified that they had seen her at various times with Edwards when he was purchasing some of items that were ultimately found with Small's body. Other witnesses reported that they had observed her at various related locations during the course of the kidnaping and ransom calls. Lastly, the State submitted evidence that Edwards had used their garage to build the box in which Small's body was found. The jury found Rish guilty on both counts, and the trial court sentenced her to a term of natural life imprisonment and a concurrent 30-year term.
The decision was close, 5-4 in favor of Maryland. The majority opinion, written by Justice Anthony Kennedy, described Maryland's law as follows: > The Act authorizes Maryland law enforcement authorities to collect DNA > samples from "an individual who is charged with... a crime of violence or an > attempt to commit a crime of violence; or... burglary or an attempt to > commit burglary." Maryland law defines a crime of violence to include > murder, rape, first-degree assault, kidnaping, arson, sexual assault, and a > variety of other serious crimes. Once taken, a DNA sample may not be > processed or placed in a database before the individual is arraigned (unless > the individual consents).
On the other hand, d'Artagnan is worried about the request of leading the Guards of Richrlieu and his isolation from the three musketeers for he never hears of the kidnaping of Constance and what Aramis does for her. Finally he accepts the cardinal's offer. Both the Guards of Louis XIII and that of Richelieu march to La Rochelle but are forced into a hard fight against the Protestant rebel supported by the Duke of Buckingham and d'Artangan and his soldiers are commanded to spearhead. It is schemed by Richelieu to kill the king's musketeers at an early stage though he survives the war while the three musketeers leaves the battlefield.
As the authorities were not yet aware of the existence of the Barkers, the kidnappings were blamed on Sankey and Alcorn, who were quickly tracked down by the FBI. On January 31, 1934, Sankey was captured by police and federal agents at a barber shop in Chicago, Illinois. He was returned to South Dakota to stand trial for the Boettcher kidnaping, being held at the state prison in Sioux Falls for added security; however, Sankey committed suicide before his trial by hanging himself in his cell with his necktie on February 8. Alcorn had been captured a week earlier and was sentenced to life imprisonment for Boettcher's kidnapping.
Landano, 637 A.2d at 1272. Two accomplices and three eyewitnesses identified Landano as Snow's murderer, and he was sentenced to fifteen-years- to-life in prison for the crime in April 1977. Landano was acquitted of murder in a retrial in 1998 and died at the age of sixty-three on November 11, 2002.Vincent J. Landano, 63; Cleared in 1976 Murder of Newark Officer Ronald Smothers, The New York Times (November 13, 2002) Breed members Kalani Lopa and Thomas Heilman were arraigned on two counts each of kidnaping after abducting club member John McGurk and Patricia McDevitt from McGurk's Bordentown home in an attempt to collect a $1,200 debt on August 17, 1977.
Floyd went to trial under the judgment of a Nevada state jury. The jurors heard Floyd's confession and watched the video from store surveillance cameras. Floyd did not testify at the three-day trial, where Emenegger, the only survivor of Floyd's rampage, testified against him. On 13 July 2000, after deliberating for little more than two hours, the jury convicted him of four counts of first degree murder with use of a deadly weapon, four counts of sexual assault with use of a deadly weapon, and single counts of burglary while in possession of a firearm, attempted murder with use of a deadly weapon, and first degree kidnaping with use of a deadly weapon.
The discovery of the site occurred during work on the foundations of a communal kindergarten. As a result of the discovery, this work was interrupted and the building was built elsewhere instead. In December 1999, during some excavations carried out to the west of Bosco by Lavinia Sole under the direction of Sopraintendente Rosalbe Panvini, three terracotta altars were discovered, dating to the 480s BC and decorated with reliefs of mythological figures, the gorgon Medusa with her children Pegasus and Chrysaor under her arms on one, the goddess Eos kidnaping Thanatos on another, and a triad of female figures whose significance is unclear on the third. The altars are on display in the .
Such was Parsons' power in Hollywood that, as an article in Life magazine summarized, she "could -- and did -- bully the biggest stars in the business into appearing without pay on her radio program." Another article in Life in 1965 summarized Parson's broadcasting success after an earlier failure: > When she flopped with a local radio program on which she interviewed "guest" > stars, she simply essayed a grander scheme; instead of kidnaping screen > personalities one by one, she corralled them by whole companies to do > synopsized versions of current movies, and in so doing, she hit it rich. Even Parsons' power, however, had its limits. Movie stars who normally received $1,000 for appearing on a radio program resented receiving only a case of soup.
Although the prosecution's lead witness, Thalia Massie, had left the Territory and could not be forced to return to testify, the four surviving Ala Moana defendants could not be exonerated immediately. As Peter Van Slingland wrote, "Congress, the Navy, and mainland public opinion would not allow the charges to be dropped without good reason." Before the subsequent dismissal of the charges, Governor Judd hired the Pinkerton's National Detective Agency to further investigate and to review the evidence. The Pinkerton agency responded with a 279-page report, in which the introductory letter stated: > An analysis of the reports of our representatives, together, with the > reports and statements of the Attorney General's office, the office of the > Public Prosecutor, and the Police Department, also the testimony at the > trial of the defendants, makes it impossible to escape the conviction that > the kidnaping and assault was not caused by those accused, with the > attendant circumstances alleged by Mrs. Massie.
Two are arraigned on kidnaping charges The Philadelphia Inquirer (August 20, 1977) John Belowsky and James R. "Axl" Fleming – both identified as Breed members by authorities – and a third man, Pasquel Varona, were arrested during a raid on an apartment in Asbury Park which led to the seizure of handguns and almost $5,000 worth of cocaine on January 25, 1995. The three men were charged with drug and weapons offences.Cocaine, guns found in raid of apartment Nancy Shields, Asbury Park Press (January 28, 1995)Breed motorcycle gang not on law's A list Neil A. Sheehan, Asbury Park Press (August 2, 1995) Eugene "Gene" Bernardo, president of the Breed's Monmouth County chapter, was charged with conspiracy to distribute almost five-hundred grams of methamphetamine in a one-count federal indictment on January 6, 1998. He was convicted of the charge on May 26, 1999.Ex-Breed leader guilty in drug case Asbury Park Press (May 27, 1999) Bernardo had acted as a middleman in a drug sale made by Carl Chianase to Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) informant Kalani Lopa in January 1997.
Meanwhile, the former City Council had awarded a franchise to the Tunnels Transportation Company to build a moving sidewalk under the Second Street Tunnel, with seats, "on each side of which would be a public sidewalk." Downs and Joseph F. Fitzpatrick, both new council members, said they were opposed to the project, but, according to William Hodges, vice-president of Tunnels Transportation, one of Downs's tenants — Jack Murphy, or J. Howard Murphy"Pickford Kidnaping Appeal Up; Decision Also Reserved in Ex-Councilmen Bribe Conviction," Los Angeles Times, April 13, 1926, page A-9 — told Hodges that the councilmen's votes could be obtained. Hodges went to Downs's office and asked him what was expected, to which Downs is said to have replied: "It's long and flat and green," and he drew a rectangle on the back of an envelope. The same day, Hodges said, he notified Council President William Workman, and he then worked with District Attorney Asa Keyes and Chief Deputy D.A. Buron Fitts to lay a trap for Downs.
Meanwhile, the former City Council had awarded a franchise to the Tunnels Transportation Company to build a moving sidewalk under the Second Street Tunnel, with seats, "on each side of which would be a public sidewalk." Fitzpatrick and Charles E. Downs, both new council members, said they were opposed to the project, but, according to William Hodges, vice- president of Tunnels Transportation, one of Downs's tenants — Jack Murphy, or J. Howard Murphy"Pickford Kidnaping Appeal Up; Decision Also Reserved in Ex- Councilmen Bribe Conviction," Los Angeles Times, April 13, 1926, page A-9 `Library card required` — told Hodges that the councilmen's votes could be obtained. Hodges went to Downs's office and asked him what was expected, to which Downs is said to have replied: "It's long and flat and green," and he drew a rectangle on the back of an envelope. The same day, Hodges said, he notified Council President William Workman, and he then worked with District Attorney Asa Keyes and Chief Deputy D.A. Buron Fitts to lay a trap for the two councilmen.

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