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15 Sentences With "list of offences"

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

The officers also found that there was no official government seal on the card boxes, which they added to the list of offences.
Lower house representative Gary Alejano accused Duterte of a laundry list of offences he said were worthy of impeachment, from concealing assets and conflicts of interest to drugs-related extrajudicial killings and running an alleged "death squad" when he was Davao City mayor.
Company spokesman David Westreich added: "The claims made in the Rolling Stone article about MeWe members are false and do not reflect the make-up of [our] millions of members...MeWe is home to upstanding, diverse members, and has 'open group' communities of all kinds..." Speaking to Business Insider, Weinstein insists MeWe's terms of service are "very strict", reeling off a list of offences which will not be tolerated on his platform, including "unlawful, harmful, obscene, or pornagraphic content" as well as anything deemed "hateful, threatening, harmful [or inciting] violence".
In November 2003, illegal moneylending was added to the list of offences punishable by caning. Malaysians have called for caning to be imposed as a punishment for illegal bike racing, snatch theft, traffic offences, deserting one's wife, perpetrating get-rich-quick schemes, and vandalism (cf. Singapore's Vandalism Act). However, these offences still remain outside the list of offences punishable by caning.
The group are subsequently arrested and charged with a laundry-list of offences. The punishment is passed at 250 hours Community Service each. Whilst the five are carrying out the community service, "The Lumberjack" returns and demands repayment. He is about to launch into an attack on the group when he is crushed by a falling set of speakers and turntable deck, accompanied by DJ Paul Elstak.
The Act provides only a relatively short list of offences that attract criminal penalties. By contrast, the Usury Act provided that any person who contravenes any provision of the Act commits an offence. Thus, for example, it was a criminal offence to charge interest higher than the Usury Act maximum, which is no longer the case. However, the Act does provide a number of civil legal remedies for consumers, some of which are drastic departures from previous law.
For a (German) list of offences see this page of the Democratic Turkey Forum (DTF). The DTF also has a page on verdicts in 2008 and statistics for 2008 The use of the Turkish alphabet is mandated by law, reflecting the historic transition from an Arabic to a Latin script. According to the Human Rights Watch 2019 report, Turkey has the maximum number of jailed journalists. In February 2018, prominent journalists Ahmet Altan, Mehmet Altan and Nazlı Ilıcak were sentenced to life imprisonment without parole on the couped charges.
Animal groups like the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies strongly opposed this bill with the support of a petition, containing almost 112,000 signatures from the Canadian public. While S-24 did increase the penalties for misconduct (the penalties section was taken from the Liberal government bill that had not yet passed), it fell short of much-needed updates to the list of offences. Bryden had to retable the bill as, like the others, it repeatedly died due to prorogation. Bryden's bill ultimately passed through the Senate and House of Commons of Canada as Bill S-203, enacted in June 2008.
Under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984(PACE), it had been possible for police to drug test Detained Prisoners since 1984. The Drugs Act 2005 introduced, at selected "intensive DIP area" police stations, a mandatory drug test for every individual who had been arrested for a specified list of "trigger offences." Trigger offences were first set out in the Criminal Justice and Court Services Act 2000, and constitute a list of offences known have a clear link to substance misuse (such as Theft). Arrestees may also be tested for 'non- trigger' offences (including, for example, those related to prostitution) with the authority of a police inspector.
Per the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974, simple cautions, reprimands and final warnings become spent (meaning that they do not need to be disclosed, unless applying for particular types of work) immediately, and conditional cautions become spent after 3 months.What is the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974? Cautions will appear on a DBS certificate until 6 years have passed (or 2 years if the person was under 18 at the time of caution) provided the offence is not on the prescribed list of offences that will never be filtered from a criminal record check. All information relating to simple cautions (as well as convictions) issued for a recordable offence is retained on the Police National Computer (PNC).
Authority to give permission may not be exercised generally by Crown Prosecutors (typically employed lawyers of the Crown Prosecution Service), but can be delegated. There is a requirement for "new and compelling evidence", not adduced during the original trial, to be found. A "public interest" test must also be satisfied, which includes an assessment of the prospect of a fair trial. The application is made to the Court of Appeal, which is the sole authority for quashing an acquittal and ordering a retrial. The offence to be re-tried must be among a list of offences in Schedule 5 of the Act,Schedule 5 all of which involve maximum sentences of life imprisonment.
Scots criminal law is separate to English criminal law, including the use of a not proven verdict at criminal trials in the Courts of Scotland. The list of offences is also different from England and Wales, and Northern Ireland. In 2007-8, there were 114 homicide victims in Scotland, a slight decrease on the previous year. In the third quarter of 2009, there were a little over 17,000 full time equivalent serving police officers. There were around 375,000 crimes in 2008-9, a fall of 2% on the previous year. These included around 12,500 non-sexual violent acts, 168,000 crimes of dishonesty (housebreaking, theft and shoplifting are included in this category) and 110,000 acts of fire-raising and vandalism.
He was involved in a controversial incident that year in a game against Carlton, knocked unconscious by a George Topping king-hit, which resulted in a field invasion.Holmesby (2007); Ross (1996), p.73. The Carlton player was banned for 35 matches, but Streckfuss was fined (£10) as well, after it was later revealed in court that he had earlier struck Carlton's Andrew McDonaldKalgoorlie Miner,"Ruffianism In Football", 9 June 1910, p.5. (Four weeks into the 1910 season, it had already become a matter of controversy that a number of serious offences on the football field had not been reported.)Football Blackguardism: Drastic Measures Demanded: List of Offences, The Argus, (Tuesday, 31 May 1910), p.6.
Commissions of oyer and terminer were issued in August, being led by Bonville's ally the Earl of Wiltshire.Storey, R.L., The End of the House of Lancaster (Guildford, 1966), 173–4 Although Bonville presented a long list of offences committed by Devon to the council (whilst mitigating his own involvement), the crown "was obviously unimpressed" by this, and eventually not only restored Devon to commission of the peace (12 September 1456) but also pardoned him and his sons for any involvement in the murder of Radford, eventually even appointing him to the lucrative office of keeper of the forest and park of Clarendon. The region subsequently remained quiet; Bonville was of advanced age and Devon was possibly unwell, as he died in Abingdon within eighteen months.Storey, R.L., The End of the House of Lancaster (Guildford, 1966), 174 His will was executed by some of the most important men on the Queen's council.
An early draft of the 1973 Protection of Diplomats Convention attempted to take a stronger step in prohibiting consideration of an alleged offender's motives, but this language was deleted from the final version of the treaty. The 1977 European Convention on the Suppression of Terrorism was more successful at limiting the scope of the political offence exception; in its first article, it provided a long list of offences which could not be regarded as political offences, including not just the traditional clause d'attentat, but also kidnapping, hostage taking, and the use of bombs and firearms where the use endangered lives. Article 13 permits contracting states to register reservations to Article 1 and thus to preserve their domestic law political offence exceptions, but, for example, the United Kingdom elected not to do so. Article 11 of the International Convention for the Suppression of Terrorist Bombings also provided that offences covered by that convention could not be regarded as political offences for the purpose of refusing an extradition request.

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