Word: arrested
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Throughout the current round of hearings, Dershowitz has claimed that the prosecution "covered up" Leuci's criminal activity in order to maintain Rosner's conviction. Leuci, who was acting as a federal agent during the time of Rosner's arrest, has acknowledged that he shared $200 stolen during an illegal narcotics search and that he served as a "middle-man' in a series of illegal payoff schemes...
...renderings of a man waking up with an erection and spraying the bathroom walls as he relieves himself and of a groom overwhelmed and reeling at the left-over odor of his own Caelia don't jolt the way they used to. In Bruce's mind the fear of arrest and exposure had mingled with excretory fantasies and the irrational guilt of old-fashioned Jewish toilet training with its terrifying threats--"He made kaka? All right, we'll get a policeman!" So you have to alert your "liberated" psyche against this sense of easy enjoyment to make meaningful your...
These were the first acts of censorship carried out by the Armed Forces Movement since it seized power April 25. Before the week was out, the government had taken full control of the television network, but it was the editor's arrest that touched at the heart of the junta's key problem: how to get out of Africa. That arduous process hit several distinct bumps last week, and there is the jarring prospect of more still to come...
Acute Sensitivity. Kim's trial is a patently political attempt to muffle dissent. So is a second trial that began at week's end. This one involves 54 of the 253 people still under arrest since last April, when more than 2,000 university students attempted to stage a demonstration against the Park regime. Among the accused is 33-year-old Kim Chi Ha, South Korea's best-known poet, whose The Cry of the People-a 2,600-word broadside against repression, corruption and abuse of power-has deeply offended the government. Also on trial...
...Tucker had been told of his rights to silence and counsel-but not that he could have a court-appointed lawyer if he was unable to pay for one. His interrogation came before the Miranda decision. His trial came afterward, and none of his statements at the time of arrest were introduced. But damaging evidence came from a witness who, Tucker had told his police questioners, was a friend who would corroborate his alibi. Tucker's attorneys argued that the name of the witness had been obtained as the "fruit" of the improper interrogation and so should be barred...