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The word 'eyewitnesses' is correct and commonly used in written English
It refers to people who have personally witnessed an event or situation. Example: The police questioned several eyewitnesses to the car accident in order to gather more information about what had happened.
Dictionary
eyewitnesses
noun
Plural of eyewitness
Exact(60)
Despite the absence of away fans the atmosphere was not helped by a security operation that, according to eyewitnesses, was woefully inadequate.
But two eyewitnesses interviewed by the Chicago Sun-Times said they did not see the teenager carrying a weapon.
"Ms Moss declined to provide any explanation when interviewed, and the direct eyewitnesses also declined to provide evidence".
A mobile phone app that enables eyewitnesses to download evidence of alleged atrocities from anywhere in the world so it can be verified and used to prosecute perpetrators is being launched on Monday.
Most reporters and eyewitnesses agreed on the chronology.
It helped Mr Modi lead the BJP to a landslide victory in state elections in December 2002.Yet forensic analysis and eyewitnesses have cast doubt on the government's theory of a preplanned arson attack.
But neither of the two leading government papers reported the insistence by one of the rabbis that the genocide suffered by European Jewry had been "confirmed by innumerable eyewitnesses and fully documented again and again".In fact, many Iranians are pretty well oblivious to the Holocaust; they are not taught about the event or even the second world war in school.
Where fingerprints and eyewitnesses used to suffice, prosecutors now present reams of mobile-phone records, CCTV tapes and DNA evidence, all patiently explained by expert witnesses.
The Israeli army says Mr Qawasmeh was slain resisting arrest; Palestinian eyewitnesses say it was an assassination.
But eyewitnesses using sequential line-ups named fillers as criminals that is, they wrongly accused people who were definitely innocent three times more often than witnesses who looked at traditional line-ups.Many reforms remain convinced that the newer method is better, but concede that the Illinois study has slowed their political momentum.
During 700 or so real police investigations in Chicago, Evanston and Joliet, eyewitnesses using sequential line-ups were less likely to name the police's suspect, or anyone at all, as the criminal.That is an ambiguous result, since the police, of course, could have been wrong about some of their suspects.
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