Word: arresters
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...journalist, Norman Barrymaine, 19 months after he had entered it. Four days later, a onetime London Daily Herald feature writer (and more recently a Chinese government translator) named Eric Gordon was allowed to leave Peking with his wife and 13-year-old son after nearly two years under house arrest. The three journalists' remembrances added up to a sometimes incredible picture of the weird variety and brutal mentality of Chinese jailers...
...London, came the description of a drab solitude "much worse than anyone can imagine." Grey, the best known of the three (and last week awarded the Order of the British Empire), was confined for 26 months in his Peking home-mostly in one room-solely in retaliation for the arrest of Communist Chinese agitators in Hong Kong during the riots of 1967. Describing "the worst moment of my two years" in an interview with a Reuters colleague, Grey told of the hot August night shortly after his capture, when some 200 Red Guards swarmed into his house and dragged...
...their house was not the "fruit" of the unlawful search of their trash. To use this evidence, the state will have to prove that the police would have been interested in the couple's activities even without the telltale trash, and also had other probable cause to arrest them. In addition, the Edwardses could benefit if a U.S. Supreme Court decision of last June (Chimel v. California) is ever made retroactive. In Chimel, the court restricted policemen making arrests to searches of the suspect's person or the "area under his immediate control...
...University policemen testified that they had seen a number of notices around the University area, but admitted that they had not seen them placed. They stated that they had followed the six throughout the early morning, and that they were present at their arrest at 4 a.m. October 2 in front of Claverly Hall...
...Cambridge police made the formal arrest...