Word: punish
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...ruling to so many at one time. His move sparked a debate on the rights of these offenders and the merits of public shaming. "We don't brand people in America," argues Gerald Rogen, president of the Coastal Bend Criminal Defense Lawyers Association. "And we damn sure don't punish the offender's family as well as the offender...
...fans on both sides of the Pacific. In the U.S., the outfielder, a virtual shoo-in as this season's rookie of the year, has already graced the cover of Sports Illustrated magazine. In Japan, legions of fans tune in at odd hours each day to watch their hero punish North American pitching. NHK broadcasts each Mariners game back to Japan and, between innings, focuses obsessively on Suzuki as he jogs, stretches, tosses a warm-up ball...
...board should be ashamed to punish these students,” PSLM member Amy C. Offner ’01 wrote in an e-mail to Chair of the Ad Board Richard D. Parker, a professor of criminal justice...
...would pick it up and repeat it. And we did. But the government's argument is laughable. How would a prosecutor know what's important to a defendant's case? Prosecutors use the excuse to minimize their misconduct under the theory "no harm, no foul," but the courts should punish those who deliberately hold back important evidence. Yet judges too often look the other...
...feeling is that the outcome of this whole affair was a triumph for the Harvard community as a whole," Herzfeld said yesterday. "It would be inconsistent...to punish them for teaching us an important lesson...