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176 Sentences With "taken to court"

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

The group's leaders were taken to court hearings in Portland.
He was later taken to court to face unspecified charges.
Offenders' vehicles are often seized and their owners taken to court.
Have any of the cases you've dealt with been taken to court?
Three teenagers have since been taken to court and are under arrest.
In cases that were not taken to court, the IRS has control.
Niwas said Singh would not be taken to court to hear his sentence.
But, in reality, most cases are not going to be taken to court.
I can't keep my son from him or I'll get taken to court.
But if there's one thing he still excels at, it's getting taken to court.
Bloom is confident that, should the case be taken to court, she will win.
Or they can be taken to court where they can argue for higher compensation.
"This is the good governance," Namal told reporters as he was taken to court.
That I could be taken to court for writing a single word in this space: _____.
In this case, as with the others, Pruitt seems likely to be taken to court.
After the company failed to do so it was taken to court by the ICO.
Essentially, as the punchline goes, John Fogerty was taken to court for ripping himself off.
The fight was taken to court, with Chobani defending its right to run the ad.
As previously reported , Schneider was taken to court over the spousal support in February of 2018.
And when Mr. Kumar was taken to court for a hearing last week, he was assaulted.
Some homes are so controversial that the owners have been fined or even taken to court.
You can't be taken to court right now—the housing courts in New York are closed.
If the ordinance is violated, the city could be taken to court and potentially face damages.
Ackal is the third consecutive sheriff to be taken to court on alleged civil rights violations.
Some criminals are involved in this and they should be taken to court, justice should be sought.
From the hundreds of cases that we've taken to court, we have a 95 percent conviction rate.
Another person, in Illinois, was taken to court over a loan that had already been paid off.
However, their families would still have to pay fines for those children or risk being taken to court.
In Kansas City, she was taken to court after morality-based complaints, which the judge quickly threw out.
Offset is being taken to court over requests for child support for his 4-year-old daughter, Kalea.
Last year, he was taken to court for calling British caver Vernon Unsworth a "pedo guy" on Twitter.
In 25 percent of cases in 2015-16, the victim declined to have the case taken to court.
Munoz, who reported himself in January for a case of abuse, was scheduled to be taken to court Friday.
Suspects have been killed by gunmen in Sri Lanka in the past when being taken to court for questioning.
He can now be formally charged for violating road traffic laws and be taken to court, the newspaper reported.
Now, people who damage a river can get taken to court by the government-appointed National River Conservation Commission.
"We're worried about bakers and florists being taken to court, as has occurred in the United States," he added.
He mocked the bumbling Islamist president Mohammed Morsi relentlessly, and was both taken to court and lionized for it.
Five other union officials and four of its members were taken to court with him, Ndiema told Reuters by phone.
Among the latest batches of businesses taken to court were dozens of New York art galleries, sued in methodical fashion.
In June, the national government was taken to court by local environmental groups for failing to tackle the air pollution levels.
Aside from images of her being taken to court proceedings, the press has pretty much only had one photo of her.
The assistant urged her to continue using Suboxone under a doctor's supervision; when Ms. Beltran refused, she was taken to court.
The site has been taken to court, threatened with closure and raided by police several times in its 18-year history.
Telenet were taken to court in November 2018 by minority activist shareholder Lucerne Capital Management which voiced concerns about corporate governance.
Most tenants who were sued for eviction were taken to court twice, once for the eviction and then for the debt.
I was taken to court in Istanbul for insulting Turkishness, a charge that can lead to a three-year prison sentence.
If the commission finds the contracts unfavorable, it can make recommendations that countries must carefully consider or risk being taken to court.
But it clearly took some bravery for Donna Gasapo to say the word fuck since she was taken to court for it.
His current tactic is to explain the present situation, instead of verifying or refuting it until the case is taken to court.
The Trump administration is again being taken to court to allow pregnant, undocumented teenagers being held in US custody to get abortions.
A 30-year-old man was taken to court in New York state by his parents to force him to leave home.
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's financial watchdog is being taken to court over its handling of an investigation into Royal Bank of Scotland's (RBS.
All in all, we suppose Alec should consider himself lucky that he wasn't taken to court for violating his $5 million NDA.
In 2014-15 almost 93,000 people were taken to court for offences related to domestic violence, a 38% increase since 2008-09.
" Trump then seemed to suggest that SNL should be sued and taken to court, "Should be tested in courts, can't be legal?
More and more cases were taken to court, working with federal authorities, and more and more crew leaders were put behind bars.
I was denied any communication with the outside world and could speak with my lawyers only when I was taken to court.
He was taken to court and waited while his Brazilian attorney, the prosecutor, and the judge figured out a plan of action.
Whether or not Hawkes could challenge the corps' determination was taken to court, eventually carrying the case to the nation's highest court.
Both businesses and governments have been taken to court accused of failing to protect people from climate change, or contributing to the problem.
By 2012, Megaupload had been taken to court, Rapidshare was neutered, and niche blogs had no reliable way to share their prized collections.
"In other countries in the region, the government would be taken to court for discriminating against pregnant girls' right to education," she explains.
Her administration has also been taken to court for renaming several Madrid streets that had honored people linked to the dictatorship of Gen.
It was only two weeks ago, after all, that the White House was taken to court over a CNN reporter's yanked press pass.
Drug manufacturers lay it on thick when it comes to possible side effects so that they can't be taken to court by dissatisfied customers.
Weinstein turned himself in at a New York police station on May 25, and was taken to court in handcuffs for his initial arraignment.
Najib was arrested on Wednesday afternoon and will be taken to court on Thursday, the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission said in a statement (MACC).
Ozzy Osbourne was taken to court in 1986 when one of his songs was accused of influencing a teen to commit suicide, for example.
They were taken to court when a former Genentech employee alleged that the company provided doctors and medical professionals with misleading information about the drug.
She recalled a young boy in a cage crying because his father had been taken to court and he had lost his aunt's phone number.
After Britons voted in a referendum last year to leave the European Union, the government was taken to court in a battle about whether Mrs.
For the eighth time in the past year, Vorayuth Yoovidhya missed a scheduled appointment to be formally charged and taken to court by Thai prosecutors.
"Kapata told the radio station, Byta FM, that, had the baboon been human, "it would have been taken to court and possibly jailed for 25 years.
Apple has been criticized and even taken to court over iMessage's tendency to basically hold your texting powers hostage if you decide to move to Android.
But it has been taken to court by anti-money-laundering agency AUSTRAC which has accused it of more 50,000 breaches of anti-money laundering rules.
Monroy-Guerra de Tesucum said she was separated from her two children and later taken to court, where she said she was "condemned" as a criminal.
The decision is likely to be taken to court by the loser, but work should begin on the cloud contract as the court battle plays out.
The story will be compared to the many cases in America where florists or bakers have been taken to court after refusing to cater for gay weddings.
If Google disputed the findings and was taken to court, it could be fined up to four times the amount it owed if it lost the case.
WhatsApp has also had its service blocked multiple times in Brazil after it was taken to court for not handing over decrypted data to law enforcement authorities.
Apple, which has refused to deliberately weaken its encryption feature for the government, has since been taken to court in similar cases to unlock different iPhone versions.
And there are certainly more examples of the NYPD being taken to court for records, and still others are waiting to hear back about their initial inquiries.
Weinstein arrived to the NYPD's 1st Precinct Friday morning flanked by marshals and was then taken to court in handcuffs where he was scheduled to be arraigned.
But at the end of the day, patents are powerful, and this isn't the first time Red has been taken to court over an invalid, vague patent.
NRDC was a co-plaintiff in the Ninth Circuit Court case, the third time NOAA Fisheries and the Navy have been taken to court over the sonar device.
Much of the confusion comes from the public not knowing if Smollett is innocent or guilty, since the dropped charges mean this case won't be taken to court.
Plus this, the 23-year-old millennial taken to court by his mom and dad, kicked out of their house, wants to share his side of the story.
He was taken to court after he minted puffin coins, for the birds that nest in Jenny's Cove, a jagged cliff face on the western coast of Lundy.
A day before he was taken to court, Mr Katumbi explained his strategy at the tennis courts behind his house in Lubumbashi, a mansion festooned with football memorabilia.
Attorney Nathan Bingham said though Washington court rules dictate that an arraignment take place before the end of the next business day, Rodriguez was never taken to court.
Then there was another case, where the assailant was taken to court but all the evidence disappeared during the trial; the rape kit the victim had delivered was gone.
But that actually ended up working against him after his murder; his killer was taken to court, but the jury couldn't separate Brody's actual persona from his evil character.
Two of the people said they expected more change to come, particularly at the bank's markets division which the Australian regulator has taken to court for suspected market manipulation.
"The decision is likely to be taken to court by the loser, but work should begin on the cloud contract as the court battle plays out," Ms. Conger adds.
Providers across the board— Anthem, BlueCross BlueShield, Aetna, Kaiser, Humana— have all been taken to court by individuals and families alleging improper denial of mental health benefits for treatment.
Usually when people are arrested on federal or state charges, they are taken to court promptly, informed of their rights and, if they cannot afford a lawyer, appointed one.
Also pending is how the state might compensate the victims' families — an issue the families have already taken to court, claiming negligence by the school district and sheriff's office.
This lawsuit spree most recently included fast food franchises such as Subway, which was taken to court in March for allegedly using NovelPoint technology in its mobile phone application.
Italy's most prominent seismologists were taken to court, accused of recklessly addressing the public about the danger of a quake in the region—a week before the big one hit.
The October rules were quickly taken to court by several states and blocked, and the second version was an endeavor to make changes that would be accepted by the courts.
In response to the charges, SNC-Lavalin all but threatened to pack up and leave the country altogether, taking its jobs with it, if the company was taken to court.
The entrenched system of 6% brokerage commissions is being taken to court, with Redfin's CEO describing the existing MLS cartel as a dinosaur about to be hit by an asteroid.
The television host was taken to court after a lawyer in Egypt, Samir Sabry, filed a lawsuit against him over the interview, which reportedly occurred in August of last year.
The suspect will remain in custody until she is taken to court Friday, police said, adding that the boy has been handed over to a government shelter in the city.
Liverpool were taken to court by New Balance last year after it was alleged the club was looking to switch to Nike once their existing contract ended in May 2020.
As parents were placed in custody of the U.S. Marshals Service and taken to court, their children were labeled "unaccompanied" and handed over to the Health and Human Services Department.
"If Ahok is taken to court, it will be the most high-profile blasphemy case in Indonesia's history because of his status as a government official," rights activist Harsono said.
After conducting an investigation in eight regions that summer, 1,140 officials were disciplined — named and shamed, asked to apologize, subjected to administrative sanctions or, in some cases, taken to court.
The case against Kelly and Baroni was taken to court late September, where federal prosecutors alleged in their opening statements that Christie, along with his confidants, had knowledge of the closures.
Even though California's privacy bill technically only affects citizens of that state, companies will build national and international policy around it to avoid getting taken to court by litigious Californian billionaires.
If Facebook failed to uphold those duties, they could be taken to court, although the nature of the proceeding and the potential penalties would depend on how the rule is written.
Ireland was taken to court for failing to recover the money, which will sit in the account until an appeal against the ruling, lodged by Apple and Ireland, has been resolved.
Ashers Baking Company, based in Northern Ireland, was taken to court after it declined to take an order at its Belfast branch in 2014 from Gareth Lee, a gay rights activist.
That was being used to marry a 13-year-old with a 40-year-old just to make sure that this man will never be taken to court for rape crimes.
Linda claimed her daughter was being taken to court to pay her rent, despite having no income, and was struggling with mental health issues including severe depression and an eating disorder.
"If a person is taken to court, he or she cannot be further questioned by the police, and in this case, the police want to question him further," Muscat told journalists.
Wong was taken to court in a prison van, and appeared relaxed with a buzz haircut after having spent five nights in jail, pumping his fist in the air at one point.
The challenge comes as several of the laws coming out of red state legislatures restricting abortion are being taken to court, with the two organizations also challenging Alabama's near-total abortion ban.
It gives parents the choice to allow their kids to do things alone, like play in a park or walk to school, without the fear of being taken to court for neglect.
Mr Pence was the first governor to be taken to court over his refugee order by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), on behalf of Exodus, a local non-profit resettlement agency.
Stephen Lynch (D-Mass.) expressed frustration over the fact that Wells Fargo and other banks can enter into government settlements, and almost none have actually been taken to court for criminal activity.
The Botswana government is being taken to court by a friend of mine who is a trans woman and because Botswana does not recognize gender, we technically don't exist in the country.
Its release coincided with his being shuffled around: One day, he was taken to court and told he would have another trial, which could mean anything, but he doubted it was good.
Facebook, which in 2015 changed its rules to permit "handmade art" depicting nudity and sexual activity, maintained that per its terms and conditions, it could only be taken to court in California.
Albany alternative weekly paper The Alt originally reported the story, which states that the group is being taken to court for their unruly behavior at the Washington Avenue Armory in March of 2015.
One for customer relationsGoldman Sachs was taken to court by Libya's sovereign-wealth fund for allegedly taking advantage of its unfamiliarity with markets in 2008 to push it into buying risky, financial products.
And the complaints women have taken to court are all too similar to those described in the email chain, making it harder for Microsoft to keep denying that the company has a problem.
Though the punishment might seem childish, it's fitting for this guy, who was taken to court because he broke an order not to contact his ex and was harassing her over text, Mashable reports.
At the least, it will void a device's warranty, but it potentially carries up to a $1,000,20163 fine and 10 years in prison, and numerous researchers, hobbyists, and companies have been taken to court.
The matter was taken to court with the ACLU representing the organizer of "Unite the Right," as the group fought the city's attempt to revoke its permit to gather at a downtown Charlottesville park.
The 40-year-old construction worker says he was taken to court the following day, charged with interrupting his TB treatment cycle by not taking his drugs, and sentenced to two years in jail.
But the group's findings did lead to a city councillor in the western Ternopil region being taken to court for allegedly voting in the interests of her private company in a land management issue.
Police said the five French suspects, all male and aged 18 and 19, were taken to court on Thursday, having spent the night in jail following their arrest in the early hours of Wednesday.
News outlets, including those that the royals have taken to court, reported on the interviews, analyzing the body language of the pair and splashing photographs and videos across their web pages on Monday morning.
"Love and Hip Hop Hollywood" star Moniece Slaughter was taken to court by a friend of hers who claims her former NBA star boyfriend wrote checks in the friend's name to pay her rent.
Image: SCY (Pixabay)A company that claimed its miracle hand sanitizers and antiseptic lotions would protect people from all sort of nasty diseases, including Ebola, is now being taken to court by the federal government.
The move comes as several of the restrictive abortion laws coming out of red state legislatures are being taken to court, with the ACLU and Planned Parenthood challenging Arkansas' 18-week abortion ban on Thursday.
"Before Puerto Rico can spend money to buy medications to treat children in this hospital it will have to pay bondholders or be taken to court," he said of the looming general obligation bond payments.
France, Germany and Britain will be taken to court over their failure to respect limits for nitrogen dioxide (NO2), while Hungary, Italy and Romania failed to meet required standards on the level of particulate matter.
The European Commission has launched legal action against Italy for failing to respond to allegations of emission-test cheating by Fiat Chrysler in a procedure that could lead to the country being taken to court.
A court in the Northern Italian city of Padua has ruled in favor of a divorced father who was taken to court for paying alimony to his ex-wife exclusively in the form of pizza.
In 2016, Apple was taken to court for refusing to help the Federal Bureau of Investigation gain access to encrypted messages sent by one of two attackers who killed 14 people in San Bernardino, Calif.
The Ashers story will also be compared and contrasted with the many cases in the United States where florists or bakers been taken to court after refusing on religious grounds to provide services for gay weddings.
"It is good that we were able to rescue her and take her to hospital as we seek to ensure that the perpetrators are taken to court," said Lawrence Kinyua, a deputy county commissioner in Kajiado.
Michael Rotondo -- the 30-year-old man who was taken to court by his mom and dad to get him booted out of their house -- is packing up to leave ... but it has not gone smoothly.
He argued that arresting pregnant teenagers would make them less likely to have sex, and that they could be forced to disclose the identity of their sexual partner if they were arrested and taken to court.
One of hundreds of Chinese activists and lawyers rounded up in a crackdown that began a year ago has been taken to court and given a suspended three year jail term for subversion, reportedly after confessing.
Jens Sturzenegger, the fifth person to be taken to court in Singapore's biggest crackdown on money laundering, pleaded guilty to six of the 16 charges filed by the prosecutors, with the rest taken into consideration during sentencing.
His lawyer, Moses Byamugisha, and allies said Besigye appeared without legal representation and said he was taken to court ahead of schedule early in the morning before being swiftly returned to Luzira maximum security prison near Kampala.
Other domestic legislation is stronger, such as the Human Rights Act, through which the government and public officials have a duty to protect life and can be taken to court for failing to do so, it added.
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The city of Brussels could be taken to court over its strict home sharing rules after the European Commission on Thursday said such rules are disproportionate, in a move hailed by U.S. home-renting company Airbnb.
Navalny said police came to his home on Thursday morning and he was taken to court and charged with violating election canvassing rules by calling for people to participate in unsanctioned rallies via videos on his YouTube channel.
And then when that asset was taken to court and had to go through all of what we saw in court, I think that it was clear to everyone that Gawker had lost a fight with very powerful interests.
So from an employer's point of view, the latest verdict somewhat reduces the risk of being taken to court by employees with vexatious demands to follow a religious practice or taboo of which they may be the sole adherent.
Very little seems to ever happen to the perpetrators and, if taken to court, these cases rarely turn out in favor of the recipient of the sexual harassment, mostly because, even with evidence, sexual harassment can be tough to prove.
LONDON (Reuters) - The European Medicines Agency, which is moving from London to Amsterdam because of Brexit, has been taken to court by its UK landlord, which wants it to keep paying a rent bill estimated at around 500 million pounds.
Even if the government has reunited more than 500 kids with their families, it's likely because these individuals were recently detained — and therefore the parents and children were being held in close proximity while the parents were taken to court.
Published in France just before the attacks of September 11, Platform elevated Houellebecq into a prophetic figure for Western media, a status further cemented when he was taken to court for stating his contempt for Islam in a publicity interview.
A spokesperson for JK Westminster told ProPublica and NYT Mag that the companies follow industry standards for maintenance, but tenants who've been taken to court have complained about many different issues, including: In some cases, these problems caused them to move out.
Otherwise, as in the case of the poetry professor in Wisconsin attacked for teaching material with L.G.B.T. content, one might be taken to court in order for an F to be changed to an A. Is there any time left for writing after this?
We spoke to Jonny Fairplay of season 7 fame and podcast host Survivor NSFW -- known for lying about his grandmother dying and getting 3rd place -- and he tells us Alec Merlino and Kara Kay shouldn't be taken to court for violating their $5 million confidentiality agreements.
The Justice Department argued in its brief that lawsuits by Congress to enforce subpoenas to the executive branch were also inconsistent with the Constitution — Burnham cited examples of presidents before the mid–20th century who refused to give information to Congress and weren't taken to court.
Liverpool were taken to court by New Balance after it was alleged that the Premier League club was looking to switch to a new deal with rivals Nike once their existing contract, reported to be worth 40 million pounds ($51.28 million) per year, ended in May 2020.
In August, she spent four days in jail and was taken to court to enter a plea for the three separate criminal cases filed against her: for possession of a controlled substance paraphernalia, vandalism, petty theft and driving under the influence of a drug, the outlet reported.
The case was taken to court, and while the D.C. circuit court ruled in the woman's favor, the Supreme Court later vacated the appeals court ruling and sent the case back to the lower courts, again failing to defend immigrant women's constitutional right to an abortion.
Nevsun, a Canadian mining firm and one of the only big foreign investors in Eritrea, says sanctions have had "no impact" on its work—but it has been taken to court for allegedly using forced labour in the construction of its zinc and copper mine near Asmara, the capital.
Even formerly respectably museum boards like those of the Corcoran Museum of Art were willing to cancel his show for fear of the Reagan era's NEA attackers; while the Contemporary Arts Center of Cincinnati was taken to court for obscenity, the first major American museum to be so threatened.
The company is now in talks with Santa Monica's director of transportation and mobility over how it can work to incorporate into the city's regulatory framework — all while being taken to court by the city for ignoring the existing regulations that it argues should already govern its ability to operate.
Those good feelings may be tarnished after a report in The New York Post on Wednesday said that Colon had been taken to court by a woman who contended that she had two children, now school age, with him out of wedlock and that he had failed to pay child support.
It's surprising too because publishers elsewhere haven't been successful in winning their court battles with ad blockers in the past In Germany, Adblock Plus parent company Eyeo has been taken to court five times — most recently by newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung, and also by Business Insider owner Axel Springer, RTL Interactive, ProSieben/Sat1, and Zeit/Handelsblatt.
Two weeks later, Mr. Garratt was taken to court, where a judge read out an eight-page guilty verdict in Chinese; the next morning, he was put on a plane bound for Tokyo, but only after agreeing to pay more than $14,000 in fines and signing a document promising not to speak with the news media about his detention.
"As long as Kenyans can see that some people have been taken to court over what has been popularly been known as the Chickengate scandal, we believe that the current commission is going to be much more careful in its observance of the procurement laws," said Julius Muraya, a deputy director at the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission.
There were 1,023 climate change cases in the US for the period of the research, followed by 94 in Australia and 53 in the UK. Most of the litigation has targeted local and national governments, but companies have also been taken to court over failures to inform shareholders of the risks of climate change, or to incorporate climate change planning into decision making.
The Beach Boys were taken to court after "borrowing" the music to Berry's "Sweet Little Sixteen" for their own "Surfin' U.S.A." But Berry got a little more personal when the Beatles' "Come Together" cribbed lyrics from his tune, "You Can't Catch Me." During a duet with Lennon on The Mike Douglas Show, Berry changing the song's key from F to E as the cameras rolled.
Considering how rare it is for someone to be taken to court, and then actually convicted of sexual assault in the first place (only 5.7 percent of reported rape cases end in a conviction for the perpetrator), to undermine that by bending the rules so he can slosh around in his wellies at Worthy Farm basically turns his sentence into a face-value statement.

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