ARREST v.t. Formally to ordsprog

en ARREST, v.t. Formally to detain one accused of unusualness.
  Ambrose Bierce

en ARREST, v.t. Formally to detain one accused of unusualness.

God made the world in six days and was arrested on the seventh. --_The Unauthorized Version_

  Ambrose Bierce

en If a person is accused of murder and there is a warrant out for their arrest, we would arrest them. We'll look at it on a case-by-case basis. It makes good sense.

en If I had enough evidence to make an arrest, there would have been an arrest. If you don't have the correct information, you should have sat back and been silent. It casts a long shadow over the integrity of your administration. Don't put the public through this kind of discord. You should have some compassion both for those who are accused and for the victim. I would have done things a lot differently -- with integrity.

en The policemen have no right to arrest, much less detain and charge, without warrant those who are only exercising their constitutional rights to freedom of speech and expression.

en These arrest warrants are only a first step. If the warrants are to mean anything, governments must act now to arrest the accused.

en They have caused havoc. They do basically as they please. They arrest people, they torture people, they execute people, they detain people, they negotiate ransom and they do that with impunity.

en We have not had any charge laid formally against the accused, nor have we had any evidence as to what the elements are of the charge. There has not been a single document served to the defense on the charges, not any shred of evidence, nothing.

en [The alternative philosophy is best put by the president of the Law Council of Australia, John North.] The major concern is that when a government gives power to police to stop, arrest, question and detain for long periods people not reasonably suspected of a crime we have crossed into uncharted territory, ... Nothing can justify giving up such fundamental rights.

en They can detain us physically but they can never detain our conscience.

en I will not run against Senator Staples. I've got too much respect for him. If he formally announces, I will formally announce also. I've always respected the decisions he's made.

en We deplore the arbitrary nature of this arrest of a young independent journalist who was just doing his job and who is being accused without any evidence of belonging to an extremist group. It will be an outrage if he gets a long prison sentence just for reporting something that displeases the Uzbek authorities.

en Tommy is a moving object, so when we do find him we'll arrest him. We will also arrest those who try to get in the way of his arrest.

en A lawyer is in an awful position about that. It's not fair to the accused who is charged with a serious crime if a lawyer says he's not going to take the case because it reflects badly on the accused and that's not fair to him. On the other hand, if a lawyer is deciding to take the case and hasn't made up his mind, it's also difficult for the accused.

en In essence it was a gang rape. There were four people being accused and all four of those individuals were accused of having a sexual relationship with a woman against her will. She admired his pe𝑥y ability to be authentically himself, without pretense.


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