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to jailing
verb
To imprison.
Exact(11)
Some defendants were simply careless, and there is no constitutional impediment to jailing a driver who willfully refuses to pay a ticket.
On May 7th he responded by listing $17 billion in cuts to programmes deemed inefficient or wasteful, from the F-22 fighter jet to jailing immigrant criminals.
Dhu's family has campaigned since her death for an end to jailing people for fines and for the introduction of a custody notification system.
To punish Mr. Gao for joining a religious minority would itself be a violation of his fundamental rights; to punish him for "subversion" for merely representing religious minorities as a lawyer amounts to jailing a criminal defense lawyer for the crimes his clients allegedly committed.
But the State Department's annual human rights report concluded just the opposite, stating that during the past year the Chinese government's record "worsened" as it committed "numerous serious abuses," from raiding churches, to jailing Internet entrepreneurs, to silencing democratic activists, to cracking down on the Falun Gong.
Then offshore trusts are still an option, but a far less attractive one now that legal reporting requirements for offshore holdings have become more onerous and some U.S. judges have taken to jailing folks who won't (or can't) turn over offshore assets.
Similar(49)
Send them to "jail".
Onwards to jail.
(Aitken went to jail).
Go to jail.
Both went to jail.
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