Sentence examples for implicate someone from inspiring English sources

Exact(6)

You need to implicate someone.

It can also be used to recognise the wrong person or implicate someone else in a crime.

Three decades and two trials later, Mr. Soffar, 57, maintains that he never committed the crimes — he says he confessed to shooting the two teenagers while trying to implicate someone else in the shootings at the bowling alley, in which three people were killed and another was injured.

"Some of the press have been very punitive towards these people and they feel their words will be badly used," says Slovo. "And young Muslims are very scared at the moment, scared that their words will be taken wrongly, that they will be fingered when they haven't done anything, that if they say something the police will come knocking at their door and ask them to implicate someone else".

Carver uses his extraordinary hacking skills and access to sensitive information to both carefully choose his victims and overwhelmingly implicate someone else as the killer.

"The reasons range from police pressure to falsely implicate someone to simply misidentifying the perpetrator," Protess, who is also a Huffington Post blogger, told the Daily Northwestern.

Similar(54)

On Tuesday, Mr. Brown was released from prison, after DNA testing on the saliva left by the biter proved his innocence and implicated someone else in the crime.

Even in instances where another person has confessed or DNA implicates someone else, prosecutors sometimes remain unwilling to dismiss a case.

"Shall we impanel a new jury for retrial, say, next week?" "The Night Of" reminds us that every operator in the American legal system is compromised, which is why Weiss retains our interest at this late moment, long after she has coached a pathologist into delivering false testimony, and just after declining to pursue late-breaking evidence that might have implicated someone other than Khan.

The scattered clues left behind implicated someone in the LuckyMe family: Baauer?

It is plausible that conversational sentence implicatures arose in much the same way idioms do.[48] "Kicked the bucket" started life when speakers used it as a metaphor to implicate that someone died.

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