Search results for: "sent" (2111 results)
calling someone a homosexual is defamatory per se—it would, in effect, validate that sentiment and legitimize relegating homosexuals to second-class
in segregated schools are “nursed in the sentiments of Caste,” “their characters are debased,” and they “become less fit for the duties of citizenship
sentence, against interposing the defense and running the risk of an acquittal on insanity grounds perhaps with a period of indeterminate commitment to a
ten minutes rewriting the sentence so it had to have a dangling preposition. Clerks quickly become accustomed to the rough-and-tumble style of the
He makes two crucial omissions in this reference: (1) the rest of the sentence; and (2) the rest of the decision. The court required that any
democratic engagement and empowerment for lawyers and citizens alike. Ackerman beautifully captures his commitment with the sentiment: “What the
strong consensus in the present, just as most radical (nonentrenching) statutes are based on widespread public sentiment. The parade of horribles is
to refer strictly to their increased likelihood of facing crim- inal liability and harsher sentencing, as well as more loosely to encompass forms of
sentencing jurisprudence). E.g., United States v. Windsor, 570 U.S. 744, 754 (2013) (showing that the President instructed th… E.g., United States v