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It has a permanent anti-terrorist task force headed by magistrates whose only mandate is to investigate acts of terrorism and potential terrorist threats.
The problems that beset both the Rump and the Nominated Parliament resulted from the diversity of groups that supported the revolution, ranging from pragmatic men of affairs, lawyers, officeholders, and local magistrates whose principal desire was to restore and maintain order to zealous visionaries who wished to establish heaven on earth.
The idea, advocated on practical and political grounds, is to hold the presidential election before the parliamentary one a sequence the Elysée's pundits fear will favour Mr Jospin.But the worst worry is that the magistrates, whose views leak out to a press that cares little for the "presumption of innocence", will find a living witness to give damning evidence against the president.
Similar(57)
At the station, Beano is brought before a magistrate whose intelligence, in retrospect, is unfortunate.
Judges and lawyers protested against the government after a minister reportedly threatened a local magistrate (whose courthouse was subsequently set alight).
The government spokesman Jean-François Cope said he was "shocked" by the uproar and called Mr Le Mesle "a high magistrate whose ethics and competence are widely recognised".
Born in 1845, Eça de Queirós (pronounced EH-sah de kay-ROSH) was the illegitimate son of a magistrate, whose support enabled him to study at Coimbra's elite university.
Censor, plural Censors, or Censores, in ancient Rome, a magistrate whose original functions of registering citizens and their property were greatly expanded to include supervision of senatorial rolls and moral conduct.
"What concerns me is that many Corsican teenagers today are viscerally anti-Arab," said Christophe Raffin, a local magistrate, whose daughters have been pressured to take sides in Corsican-Arab schoolyard disputes.
Yves Montand plays the opposition leader who is murdered, a character based on the actual Greek politician Gregorios Lambrakis; Jean-Louis Trintignant plays the dogged magistrate whose investigation uncovers a vast right-wing conspiracy.
October 1678 Sir Edmund Godfrey, in full Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey (born Dec. 23, 1621, probably Sellinge, Kent, Eng. died October 1678), English magistrate whose death, allegedly at the hands of Roman Catholics, touched off a wave of anti-Catholic hysteria that shook the government of King Charles II.
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