Search results for: "sent" (2112 results)
to refer strictly to their increased likelihood of facing crim- inal liability and harsher sentencing, as well as more loosely to encompass forms of
oligopolists to buy the unwanted product in order to subsidize other people.” Note the peculiar formulation in the cumbersomely constructed sentence just
testimony of L. Maurice Bessinger). (In a single terse sentence, the Court unanimously held that this free exercise argument was “so patently frivolous” that
sentences depends critically on context, including all sorts of background understandings.”); Note, Looking It Up: Dictionaries and Statutory
of sentiments shared by at least some opponents of Medicaid expansion . . . . [Coverage] disparities suggest that politicians who oppose Medicaid
” Such sentiments, in turn, erode support for the EPA itself, which is seen as delivering the federal government’s unfunded mandates. The bottom line is
“if it be found that the former decision is manifestly absurd or unjust, it is declared, not that such a sentence was bad law; but that it was not
state law under which a narcotics addict was sentenced to ninety days' imprisonment on the ground that to condemn a person for "an illness, which may be
offense, criminal history, length of sentence, propensity for violence, gang membership, cognitive functioning, mental illness, and developmental
convoluted sentence that is a patent claim. Or perhaps it is simply the result of a circumstance in which the more we learn, the more we learn what we don’t