Sentence examples for judicially from inspiring English sources

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judicially

adverb

In a judicial manner.

Exact(59)

"As a result of the Second Circuit decision, the USA Freedom Act's modest changes appear even smaller compared to the now judicially recognized problems with the mass collection of Americans' records," the Electronic Frontier Foundation's David Greene and Mark Jaycox wrote in a Tuesday op-ed.

Though he is said to have softened his views, Mr Ocalan's avowed Leninism hardly heralds a democrat.But killing him judicially would still be a mistake.

Ultimately the row over the pact will have to be settled politically, not judicially.

But any group that opposes the mandate is free to go its separate way.Mr Epstein slices to the bone: the true libertarian position does not valorise religious claimants as uniquely deserving of legislative or judicially enforced carve-outs.

Yet the open employment of judicially sanctioned execution as a matter of public policy is different from the use of military terror and death squads, practices which even the harshest regimes usually feel ashamed enough about to deny.

"If you do not follow the correct legal processes, you will be judicially reviewed, and all the decisions that you would like to make from a political point of view will be struck down in the courts.

It was a trope a year ago from the right when the court upheld the constitutionality of Obamacare on grounds some thought were judicially invented.

The judge in the Harpersville ruling called that town's private-probation practices "a debtors' prison" and "a judicially sanctioned extortion racket".

This raised his personal one-month total of death sentences beyond the number of people known to have been judicially executed worldwide last year, excluding China, and close to the 1,378 that America has injected, electrocuted, shot or gassed since reintroducing capital punishment back in 1976.Yet the most populous Arab country may not carry out such lethal punishments.

In Pakistan, Benazir Bhutto is a former prime minister, no stranger to either jail or exile; her father, an earlier prime minister, was hanged, or, as some would say, judicially assassinated.Democracy in widows' weedsIt takes the world's biggest democracy, however, to produce Asia's greatest dynasty, replete with both daughters' and widows' politics.

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Many of these fees are small, but for poor Americans they impose an additional burden that can last long after a judicially-imposed sentence has ended.

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