Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"prejudged" Antonyms

111 Sentences With "prejudged"

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

C.: They prejudged the outcome of that Hillary Clinton instigation before the investigation ended and these exact same FBI agents and attorneys prejudged the outcome of the Russia investigation before it even began.
They had prejudged the outcome of the Hillary Clinton investigation before the investigation ended and these exact same FBI agents and attorneys prejudged the outcome of the Russia investigation before it even began.
" He said he believes Schiff has "already prejudged the case.
Republicans have argued that Comey prejudged the outcome of the Clinton investigation.
He thought administrators had prejudged him, he said, so he resigned via email.
Some voters expressed frustration that the lawmakers themselves appeared to have prejudged the case.
We shouldn't be prejudged on possible treatments or rulings but, rather, on our records.
"I have in no way prejudged this case," Justice James Burke told Weinstein's lawyers.
"We really just haven't prejudged that," AT&T's general counsel, David McAtee, told Reuters.
At least, they should not have been prejudged as a sinister obstruction of justice.
" • Fuller said the case against his client "is the ultimate example of a person being prejudged.
" Fuller said the case against his client "is the ultimate example of a person being prejudged.
"I have received a subpoena signed only by Democrat Chairs who have prejudged this case," he said.
"I have received a subpoena signed only by Democrat Chairs who have prejudged this case," Giuliani said.
"I believe that ultimately everyone wants to be seen for who they are and not prejudged," he said.
And these exact same FBI agents and attorneys prejudged the outcome of the Russia investigation before it even began.
Google's Pixel phone has already earned the prize for being the most comprehensively leaked (and prejudged) gadget in history.
"I believe that ultimately everyone wants to be seen for who they are and not prejudged," he told CNN.
"These exact same FBI agents and attorney prejudged the outcome of the Russia investigation before it even began," he added.
Many Israelis, including Mr. Lieberman, said the denunciation prejudged the case and undermined the troops as they battled Palestinian violence.
"In the article published yesterday, Wirecard employees are slanderously prejudged with unproven and false allegations," Wirecard said in an earlier statement.
Senators who proclaim they have prejudged the outcome will not serve as impartial jurors and should be recused from the trial.
As we reported, the same day Behn died, Spacey posted a bizarre video saying people who prejudged him should check themselves.
That will be fodder for Trump who will say the former FBI director had prejudged the case before even seeing it. 8.
But the superluxury setting has led to the project's being prejudged as an emblem of globalization rather than of global consciousness-raising.
And I think that our film challenges people to flesh out these women that have been marginalized and prejudged for so long.
Today, the selection of some of the investigative counsel by the Democratic House leadership is already being attacked as having prejudged the evidence.
Such actions would have prejudged final status negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, would have inflamed the region and undermined efforts at peace.
Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter, a Democrat on the FTC, said she had not prejudged a decision on a rule but seemed skeptical of such agreements.
And the impression is reinforced by the fact that Mr Barr prejudged the Mueller investigation, in the president's favour, before he took charge of it.
Critics have said that recognizing Israel's claim to Jerusalem without acknowledging a Palestinian claim broke with international consensus and prejudged the outcome of any negotiations.
Critics have argued that unilaterally recognizing Israel's claim to the city prejudged the outcome of any negotiations for a solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Senate Democrats may also try to push for Barr's recusal in the Russia investigation, saying he can't be impartial since he has prejudged the investigation.
Model judges are epistemically just: Their cognitive processes are never biased or unduly swayed, their conclusions are not prejudged, and their verdicts reliably correspond to the facts.
He said on Sunday that he would comply if Trump asked him to, but attacked Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff as unqualified because he has "prejudged the case."
Instead, provided they have not prejudged the facts, jurors evaluate the evidence admitted at trial fairly, applying common sense and their general understandings of how the world operates.
"It is only a shame [that] there are those who so publicly prejudged this case and that it took this long for Ed to be fully cleared," Berk stated.
Speaking out on presidential or congressional excesses that may reach them in their official capacity could possibly result in disqualification, the judge being seen as having prejudged the issues.
It prejudged arguably the most sensitive issue in the long-running Israeli-Palestinian conflict and set off protests across the Middle East, with many demonstrations targeting US embassies overseas.
It is a shame there are those who prejudged this case and that it took over 8 months for Ed to be officially cleared of all of these charges.
Lawyers for Medicaid beneficiaries in Kentucky said the statements showed that Trump administration officials had prejudged the issue and knew what they would conclude even before considering public comments.
Giuliani said at the time that he had received the subpoena and would consider it, but he criticized the Democratic lawmakers who signed it as having "prejudged" the case.
But the implication of the statements was that the caravan would face elevated scrutiny at best — and, at worst, that the Trump administration really had prejudged the caravan members.
Our democracy will need an unbiased and principled Supreme Court functioning at its finest when that time comes, and a justice who has prejudged as Kavanaugh would impede that responsibility.
And all of us could direct the same energy and opprobrium that we level at moderate women at the men who prejudged the outcome of this process and proceeded accordingly.
In letting Polster stay on, the appeals court said judges in complex cases were encouraged to pursue settlements early, and Polster's efforts did not suggest he had prejudged the case.
Public schools of choice should be open to all families, and every child should be welcomed and given an equal chance, not prejudged based on his history, life or academic circumstances.
Among other comments, Mr. Whitaker had once declared that there was "no collusion" between the Trump campaign and Russia — a remark that prompted Democrats to say he had prejudged the inquiry's conclusion.
Democrats reacted with fury to Grassley's move, saying that it prejudged the outcome of Thursday's hearing and showed Republicans didn't want a fair process and had no interest in finding the truth.
Gowdy said that text message was evidence that Strzok had "already prejudged the outcome," noting that Strzok "already determined Trump should not be president of the United States" just days into the investigation.
With an influence on world affairs that far outstrips their numbers (below 500,000), the Quakers have won respect for their willingness to undertake a quest for truth whose end-point cannot be prejudged.
"I think there is potential there for finding a violation, but I don't want to suggest that I have prejudged anything that could potentially come before me," Ellen Weintraub told the news outlet.
When he mulls over (or even reconsiders) the possibility of carrying out that promise once he is president, he can't recuse himself on the ground that he prejudged the issue as a candidate.
In a hastily written filing, the lawyers argued that Justice Burke had apparently prejudged the trial's outcome, assuming that Mr. Weinstein would be convicted and thus would be eligible for life in prison.
"The Malaysian government has made it clear it has prejudged the guilt of everyone connected to this case, and the inhumane conditions in Malaysia's prisons are well publicized," he wrote in an email.
The outcome of an investigation should not be prejudged while FBI agents are still hard at work trying to gather the facts… Conclusion first, fact-gathering second—that's no way to run an investigation.
"Instead of meeting with all stakeholders and considering multiple points of view, you appear to have prejudged the outcome of the review," the senators wrote in a copy of the letter seen by Reuters.
When I met Chris, and found out that his best friend was...a woman, and that it was a long-term friendship, I had a real moment of shame and said woah — I had definitely [been] prejudged.
In some ways it's important to believe that they don't know, because if you know at the outset of a case when you're going to be done, then that suggests that you've prejudged it in some way.
It's impossible to judge the Garfield situation, because all we are permitted to know is that it has been prejudged for us, by people who refuse to tell us anything about either their evidence or their decision process.
It prejudged one of the conflict's most sensitive issues in Israel's favor and emboldened and rewarded the most hardline elements in Israel while compromising those Palestinian and Arab leaders who had put their trust in the US role.
"The FCC majority prejudged the merits of this merger two months before the Justice Department found the combination of T-Mobile and Sprint to be anticompetitive and required the creation of a new fourth competitor to pass legal muster," she said.
"I certainly never actually meant that I was going to put your client in jail for life, nor did I mean, because I have not, that I have prejudged whether he is guilty or innocent of the charges," the judge said.
"If Twitter controls publishing, we'll soon enter a dreary monoculture that admits no book unless it has been prejudged and meets the standards of the censors," Jennifer Senior wrote in a New York Times opinion piece about young-adult literature.
" The Brennan Center's Goitein noted that his "statements suggest he's opposed to a full and fair investigation by the Mueller team and has prejudged what the outcome should be, at least with respect to possible collusion between the Trump team and Russia.
Although GOP members did not directly criticize the inspector general, Michael Horowitz, they repeatedly made the case that his report showed FBI officials had "prejudged" the outcome of the Clinton probe — a long-held Republican grievance — and suggested that his review was incomplete.
But there is worry that intelligence leaks painting Kim as unwilling to denuclearize may diminish the likelihood that he will cooperate, "if he thinks that, no matter what he does, the US has already prejudged him to be untrustworthy," the source said.
If we have ever seen an appearance of impropriety in our decades of experience, this is it: a criminal subject president appointing his own prosecutor — one who has evidently prejudged aspects of the investigation and mused about how it can be hampered.
The Trump administration's recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and the opening of the embassy on Monday have upended decades of American policy and bucked the international consensus that it prejudged the outcome of Israeli-Palestinian negotiations about the future status of the contested city.
Pointing to the anti-Donald Trump text messages exchanged by FBI agent Peter Strzok and former FBI lawyer Lisa Page, Republicans argued that the key officials on the Clinton case had no interest in charging Clinton — but had prejudged the outcome of the investigation into Trump and Russia.
A stew of mostly male social media users prejudged Larson's performance, calling it "wooden" and claiming she ought to "smile more"—a very common form of harassment that objectifies women by implying their emotions and appearance ought to be controlled and that they're for the pleasure of others.
Don't mistake this for the movie preaching to anybody, even in a scene in which the Browns confront their constantly vigilant neighbor Mr. Curry (Capaldi) over his inability to accept that Paddington is a good little bear, simply because Mr. Curry has prejudged Paddington due to how he looks.
Samantha Harris, a vice president for the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, said the proposed regulations "make important strides toward ensuring that complaints of sexual misconduct will be neither ignored nor prejudged" and eliminate confusion that has led to "broad definitions of sexual harassment that threaten student and faculty speech" on campuses.
We caught glimpses of this playbook — of dreaming up fraud where none exists — when Mr. Trump prejudged the outcome of the 2016 campaign, by calling the election "rigged," refusing to say if he'd accept a loss to his rival, and deputizing his supporters to police polling places in Democratic strongholds, like Philadelphia.
With key Republican senators having told the American people that they prejudged the case against President Trump before it began and even working with Mr. Trump's lawyers to build the very defense for which they're supposed to be the audience, the notion that they're doing the "impartial justice" they've sworn to do is very much in question.
" (Bookstein did not respond to VICE News' request for comment.) Cohen said that he didn't expect Trump's comments would change the course or outcome of Gutierrez's case, but he said he could see "a defense attorney citing the speech in a motion about prejudicial pretrial publicity or in comments to prospective jurors about whether they've prejudged the case.
Interesting because, we&aposre learning it on the same day that Strzok came under fire as did former FBI director James Comey, at a House hearing where Republicans asserted that bad apples at the agency were so biased, that they prejudged not just the outcome of the Hillary Clinton e-mail probe but also the outcome of the Russia investigation involving President Trump.
The trial in Brussels is the first time the public will be given a sense of how prosecutors are piecing together the parts of what they say was a larger conspiracy, and Mr. Abdeslam used his first opportunity to speak at the trial to suggest that he had been prejudged by both the public and the court because he is a Muslim.
Sizeism or size discrimination is the idea that people are prejudged by their size.
Then Chodkiewicz, ordered to attack the regiment under the leadership of Tomasz Dąbrowa. The surprising impact of the Lithuanian cavalry led to the breakdown of Mansfeld's army. The Swedes have suffered heavy losses. The victory at Daugavgriva, prejudged the Lithuanians regained Daugavgrīva.
"These defendants were prejudged as guilty and the trial was but a legal gesture to register a verdict already dictated by the press and the public opinion which it generated." A new trial was ordered.Shepherd v. Florida, 341 U.S. 50, 71 S. Ct. 549 (1951), Per Curiam.
She has written one novel, Elbowing the Seducer, which was published in 1984. As a writer, she uses only the initial letter of her given name (Trudy), because she does not want to be "prejudged by gender".Nan Robertson (June 14, 1984). "Self-professed Worrier Whose Writing Shocks".
On 30 September, the fifth round of diplomatic talks took place; this was the 19th meeting of the WMCC. On 13 October, the seventh round of military commanders talks in Chushul took place; while the talks were called positive, on ground issues and tensions remain. On 15 October, Jaishankar said that the talks between India and China to resolve the standoff are "confidential" and shouldn't be "prejudged".
Public Prosecutor [1989] 1 S.L.R.(R.) 346 at 357, para. 23, Ct. of Crim. App. (Singapore). When a judge is found to have prejudged, he will not have an open mind and is likely to have determined issues adversely against a party before the presentation of a case. However, when he descends into the arena, he may not necessarily have taken sides before the hearing.
Described as "introspective", the video "conveys a powerful message" which revolves around three different stories of people who are being wrongly prejudged by others. In one story, Luckett makes a cameo appearance as a friend to a woman dealing with low self-esteem which causes her to self-harm. Also a homeless man asks a woman to spare change. She lowers her car window and doesn't give him anything.
He filed a lawsuit alleging that the Commissioner had prejudged the case and could not provide a fair hearing. A Cincinnati judge issued a temporary restraining order to delay the hearing, but Giamatti fought to have the case moved to Federal Court. The Commissioner prevailed in that effort, after which he and Rose entered settlement negotiations. On August 24, 1989, Rose voluntarily accepted a permanent place on baseball's ineligible list.
Yonie Wondernose is a 1944 picture book by Marguerite de Angeli, who would later win the Newbery Medal for The Door in the Wall. Sometimes described as an "Amish Curious George", the book was to win the Caldecott Honor citation. As with many of de Angeli's books, she expressed interest in little-known and prejudged people. This was the second book she wrote about the Amish community, the first being Henner's Lydia.
AndrewII employed Jews and Muslims in the administration of royal revenues, outraging the prelates and Pope HonoriusIII. The Pope authorized Robert, Archbishop of Esztergom to apply ecclesiastical sanctions against the King in 1231. AndrewII was forced to re-issue the Golden Bull, but without the articles that prejudged the interests of the Church. The new document exempted the prelates' estates of the jurisdiction of the ispáns and established the monopoly of ecclesiastical courts in matters relating to marriage and dowry.
Citing the need to protect Bernardo's right to a fair trial, a publication ban was imposed on Homolka's preliminary inquiry. The Crown had applied for the ban, which was imposed on July 5 by Francis Kovacs of the Ontario Court of Justice (General Division). Homolka, through her lawyers, supported the ban; Bernardo's lawyers argued that he would be prejudged by the ban, since Homolka had been portrayed as his victim. Four media outlets and one author also opposed the ban.
Stevens led action to stop NHS funding of homeopathy, on the grounds that "There is no robust evidence to support homeopathy, which is at best a placebo and a misuse of scarce NHS funds." NHS England was then sued by the British Homeopathic Association who argued that Stevens’ criticisms, including on the BBC Radio Today programme, prejudged its public consultation. The High Court dismissed the BHA challenge, and backed NHS England. Speaking at the World Economic Forum he launched the first wave of NHS Innovation Test Beds.
The case came to the Supreme Court to decide the question of whether Irvin's escaping from custody forfeited his right to appeal. Beyond that, the justices on the court prone to judicial restraint (Frankfurter, Harlan, Clark, and Whittaker) were usually not supportive of the idea of a federal court issuing a writ of habeas corpus in a state prosecution case. Brennan and Warren were concerned with the jurors who were allowed to sit on the case despite having prejudged the outcome. Justice Stewart at first felt that court precedent, especially the case of Brown v.
66ff, as well as Robertson The rhetor Hermagoras of Temnos, as quoted in pseudo-Augustine's De Rhetorica,Although attributed to Augustine of Hippo, modern scholarship considers the authorship doubtful, and calls him pseudo-Augustine: Edwin Carawan, "What the Laws have Prejudged: Παραγραφή and Early Issue Theory" in Cecil W. Wooten, George Alexander Kennedy, eds., The orator in action and theory in Greece and Rome, 2001. , p. 36. applied Aristotle's "elements of circumstances" (μόρια περιστάσεως) as the loci of an issue: :Quis, quid, quando, ubi, cur, quem ad modum, quibus adminiculis.
Strength in Numbers was completed over a period of two years; started in 2011. Chops wanted this album to be a mixture with himself (producer) and artists to create a great album composed of pure Asian American artists that had great talent. The birth of this album was because Chops wanted people to dismantle the stereotypes and let the music speak for itself instead of the way the artists’ looks. Chops as other Asian American artists have been prejudged that they are not capable of creating great music because of their ethnicity.
The department of public prosecution in Zwickau also investigated her because child pornography had been found on her computer. However, this investigation was said to have been closed, since the penalty for this would be of "no significant weight" in comparison to the penalty for the actions of which she had already been accused."Besitz von Kinderpornografie: Staatsanwaltschaft ermittelte gegen Zschäpe", Spiegel Online Panorama, 12 February 2013. In February 2013, 60-year-old Annerose Zschäpe told Focus that she thought her daughter was being prejudged and that her position was not being considered objectively.
On the day of July 17, 1962, a hearing was set in place for Jerrie Cobb's and Jane Hart's testimony. In further detail, Almost Astronauts: 13 Women Who Dared to Dream, justifies the hearings and statements done by the two as well as the reporters and the press. Their testimonies make inquiries about the discrimination among women and that their talents should not be prejudged or prequalified due to the fact that they are not men. The book included a photo of Jerrie Cobb and Jane Hart at the witness stand that has made a huge impact on future women astronauts.
On 19 April 2010, the Supreme Court of India approved the sentences and said that Former Solicitor General of India, Gopal Subramaniam arguing on behalf of the prosecution quoted Chandra Mohan Tiwari vs. State of M.P., (1992) 2 SCC 105 and Jaswant Singh vs. State of Haryana, (2000) 4 SCC 484 to establish his case.Supreme Court of India Judgement of Criminal Appeal 179 of 2007 Senior advocate Ram Jethmalani, who represented Sharma in the Supreme Court, assailed the High Court verdict, alleging that the media had prejudged the issue and conducted a campaign to vilify his client.
Fontana started working for Gene Roddenberry (pictured in 1961) while covering his secretary's sick leave. She saw a position on a Marine Corps-based series called The Lieutenant and applied; Fontana began working as a secretary for producer Del Reisman. Around this time, she adopted the gender-blind pen name D. C. Fontana for her writing, to prevent her pitches being prejudged on the basis of her gender, as she was one of the few female writers at NBC at the time. The Lieutenant was created by Gene Roddenberry, whom she ended up working directly for after his secretary fell ill.
The French Constitution of 1791, Title III, Chapter II, Section I, codified the ancient succession law of the Kingdom of France: > Kingship is indivisible and delegated hereditarily to the race on the > throne, from male to male, by order of primogeniture, to the perpetual > exclusion of women and their descendants. Followed by a parenthesis: > (Nothing is prejudged on the effect of renunciations in the race on the > throne.) The last statement was inserted in September 1789, during the development of the 19 original articles, following heated debates on the meaning and value of the renunciations of Philip V of Spain in Utrecht.
Rose continued to deny all of the accusations against him and refused to appear at a hearing with Giamatti on the matter. He filed a lawsuit in Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas, the Ohio state trial court covering Cincinnati, alleging that the Commissioner had prejudged the case and could not provide a fair hearing. The Court of Common Pleas issued a temporary restraining order to delay the hearing, but Giamatti sought to remove the case to the federal United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. The Southern District of Ohio granted Giamatti's removal petition.
He also gained support from a Jewish rabbi who said "not only one man can be convicted representative for one country" and Trautmann should not be prejudged. Remarkably his dissenters soon changed their tone with his stellar performances, in an often struggling Manchester City when he first joined. His bravery to claim a loose ball often at the peril of an oncoming opponent at full speed was admired by many supporters, not only City supporters. It was this technique that gave him a broken neck in the 1956 FA Cup Final and had to play the last 15 minutes as no substitutes were left.
The training was overseen by the commander of the aircraft. The bad weather caused delay in the flight and the incidence of lightning hampered the operation of the NDB of Florianópolis, generating a false block of position, that prejudged the judgment of the crew. The crew's overconfidence of their geographic position prevented the approach being done from being aborted. When approaching the landing in an incorrect location (caused by the false NDB readings), the aircraft flew below the safety limit of that region, about 60 m high, and collided with Morro da Virgínia, hitting the trees until it reached the north side of the hill.
Carmody responded five days later was that "Any suggestion that this would be sufficient to give rise to a reasonable apprehension of bias or prejudice ... is unsupported by precedent and utterly preposterous." The response from McMurdo was to advise the Supreme and District Court executive director that she would not sit with Carmody. Carmody disclosed the meeting with Johnson and Cowan made an application that Carmody recuse himself for apprehended bias. Carmody proposed to deal with the recusal application himself, which promoted a further reaction from McMurdo and Fraser that there was a reasonable apprehension that in stating the recusal application was utterly preposterous, Carmody had prejudged the recusal application.
The quoted description is from page 56,003 of the final rule. Pursuant to the out-of- court settlement between HUD and Nehemiah back in 1998, the effective date with respect to Nehemiah would have been delayed for six months to March 31, 2008. However, Nehemiah sued HUD in a federal district court, citing violations of the Administrative Procedure Act. In particular, Nehemiah alleged that (i) HUD failed to provide a "reasoned analysis" for its change in policy, (ii) HUD ignored reasonable alternatives (such as charging mortgage- insurance premiums that varied according to the risk of default), (iii) HUD relied on data that was not provided to the public, and (iv) HUD's secretary (Alphonso Jackson) had prejudged the outcome before all public comments had been received.
The film shows that psychiatry became a tool in the gender politics of the era, only a few years after women's suffrage in the United States was guaranteed by the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment. As women ceased to be second-class citizens and began to assert their independence, the male establishment used mental institutions in an effort to disempower them; in common with other unmanageable women, Collins is subjected to medical treatment designed to break her spirit and compel obedience, though some of the treatments, specifically the electroconvulsive therapy depicted in the film, did not exist ca. 1928–1930. The film quotes the testimony of the psychiatrist who treated Collins. Eastwood said the testimony evidenced how women were prejudged, and that the behavior of the police reflected how women were seen at the time.
The applicants applied to a Provincial Division for the resolution adopted by the House to be set aside. The first applicant contended that she had not had a fair hearing before the ad hoc committee, in that # the ANC members of the committee had tried to exclude her from its deliberations; # they had prejudged the issue; and # they had never seriously attempted to enquire into her conduct. Accordingly there was actual bias, or, alternatively, a reasonable suspicion of bias, on the part of the ANC members of the ad hoc committee. She further averred that she had not understood the previous resolution of the House to be anything more than a ruling in a particular matter and did not understand it to create a new rule or convention in the House.
The Irvin case centered on a series of murders in Evansville, Indiana, from 1954 to early 1955. In April 1955, local police arrested Leslie Irvin, announcing he had confessed to the crimes.. Irvin's lawyers sought a change of venue for the case to avoid local biases, but they lost; a third of the jury was seated despite statements showing they had prejudged the defendant to be guilty. Irvin was sentenced to death in January 1956; he soon escaped from jail, leaving a note maintaining his innocence and alleging police misconduct and public prejudging of his case, as well as asking his lawyer to appeal.. Irvin was soon recaptured, and the Indiana Supreme Court would reject his motions for appeals.. Irvin's lawyer came to the Supreme Court asking for a writ of habeas corpus.
He then travels to the small town of Hope, Washington (the movie was filmed in Hope, British Columbia, evidenced by the town sign), where he is quickly spotted by the town's arrogant and abusive sheriff, Will Teasle, due to his long, unkempt hair, army jacket and overall scruffy appearance. Teasle soon picks him up and drives him to the edge of town, refusing to let him have a meal in town (Rambo only wanted something to eat) while stressing his prejudged dislike of drifters and "trouble makers". Rambo, still hungry, begins defiantly walking back into town almost immediately after being dropped off, and Teasle, spotting him again, arrests him on the spot this time and takes him to the local police station. When searching Rambo, Teasle discovers a large survival knife on Rambo's belt.
On March 28, 2006 Hutson, and five other retired officers, called on US Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia to recuse himself from considering Hamdan v. Rumsfeld. Scalia's Recusal Sought in Key Detainee Case: Retired Officers Say Justice's Impartiality Is in Question After Remarks on Combatants, Washington Post, March 28, 2006 On March 27, 2006 comments Scalia had made on the Guantanamo detainees and whether they were entitled to the protections of the Geneva Conventions were widely republished. No Legal Rights for Enemy Combatants, Scalia Says: 'War Is War,' Justice Tells Audience, Washington Post, March 27, 2006 The officers felt that Scalia's comments showed he had already prejudged the merits of Hamdan's case before hearing the arguments in court. The Washington Post observed that while a Justice was required to recuse himself or herself when they had a conflict of interest, the decision as to whether recusal was necessary was left to the discretion of the Justice in question.
On March 28, 2006 Cullen, and five other retired officers, called on US Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia to recuse himself from considering Hamdan v. Rumsfeld.Scalia's Recusal Sought in Key Detainee Case: Retired Officers Say Justice's Impartiality Is in Question After Remarks on Combatants, Washington Post, March 28, 2006 On March 27, 2006 comments Scalia had made on the Guantanamo detainees and whether they were entitled to the protections of the Geneva Conventions were widely republished.No Legal Rights for Enemy Combatants, Scalia Says: 'War Is War,' Justice Tells Audience, Washington Post, March 27, 2006 The officers felt that Scalia's comments showed he had already prejudged the merits of Hamdan's case before hearing the arguments in court. The Washington Post observed that while a Justice was required to recuse himself or herself when they had a conflict of interest, the decision as to whether recusal was necessary was left to the discretion of the Justice in question.
On March 28, 2006 Brahms, and five other retired officers, called on US Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia to recuse himself from considering Hamdan v. Rumsfeld.Scalia's Recusal Sought in Key Detainee Case: Retired Officers Say Justice's Impartiality Is in Question After Remarks on Combatants, Washington Post, March 28, 2006 On March 27, 2006 comments Scalia had made on the Guantanamo detainees and whether they were entitled to the protections of the Geneva Conventions were widely republished.No Legal Rights for Enemy Combatants, Scalia Says: 'War Is War,' Justice Tells Audience, Washington Post, March 27, 2006 The officers felt that Scalia's comments showed he had already prejudged the merits of Hamdan's case before hearing the arguments in court. The Washington Post observed that, while a Justice was required to recuse himself or herself when they had a conflict of interest, the decision as to whether recusal was necessary was left to the discretion of the Justice in question.
Another factor considered was gender balance, particularly as the chair chosen is male. The vote on the proposal to include Dubs was lost 16–18 and there was a request during the meeting for it to voted on again after it was argued that Wilcox had vocally supported Starmer and Rosena Allin-Khan. In June, Labour's press office provided a statement prepared by party lawyersto journalists covering the story that defended the comments, describing criticism as "po-faced" and stating: "These were messages exchanged between co-workers in the expectation that they would remain private and confidential and the tone of the language used reflects that." In response, 13 NEC members (one third of the NEC), including representatives from four trade unions (Transport Salaried Staffs' Association, Fire Brigades Union, Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen and Unite the Union) wrote to Keir Starmer, accusing his office of misleading them about how the party dealt with leaked WhatsApp messages by senior officials detailed in the report and accusing party officials of defending "racist, sexist and abusive" messages about colleagues, and "also directly prejudged the specific issues that Martin Forde's inquiry is considering ... and thereby undermines its independence".

No results under this filter, show 111 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.