Word: murderes
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...impose their morals on the great public." But we do this all the time--they're called laws. The logic here seems to say, 'don't like abortion? Then don't have one.' If we extend this line of logic, we would find ourselves saying, 'Don't like murder? Then don't murder anyone,' or 'don't like drunk driving? Then don't drive drunk.' It's not sufficient that I myself don't drink and drive, the government should make laws that prevent others from drinking and driving. If we know that abortion is morally wrong, then...
...defense. It is believed the reports may not be seen by the jury because they were based on a meeting with a defense team member. Under this particular legal proceeding, the defense does not have to provide evidence of this kind to the prosecution. McVeigh's trial on murder and conspiracy charges begins March 31 in Denver. Nichols will be tried separately. If convicted, they could get the death penalty for an attack which killed 168 people and injured more than...
...United States has traveled. After the Civil War and Reconstruction, white supremacy reared its ugly head, rolling back the progressive laws enacted to secure the freedom and agency of black Americans. After 1877, the New South planted fields of cotton drenched in the blood of black men savagely murdered by lynch mobs that contained town sheriffs, in much the same way inner-city police continue to murder African-Americans without restraint, remorse or reproach...
...CHARLES PRICE, 43, of civil rights violations in the 1991 death of Yankel Rosenbaum, a Hasidic Jew who was attacked by a band of black men after a car accident in which a Hasidic motorist struck and killed a black child; in New York City. Nelson was acquitted of murder in a 1992 state trial, but Attorney General Janet Reno ordered a federal investigation...
...William Goldman, 65, working from the David Balducci novel, asks you to believe that the burglar has hidden behind a two-way mirror in a room where the President is having nasty sex with his adviser's young wife--and that our larcenous hero does nothing to stop her murder. This old-style thriller sometimes creaks in its joints as it adds an amoral aide (Judy Davis), a canny cop (Ed Harris) and a Secret Service agent (Scott Glenn) as weary as the one Clint played in In the Line of Fire. But Eastwood is less interested in political corruption...