Word: warrantable
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...fatal mistake. It made no effort to detain her further or to place her under surveillance while Ford was in California. Its officials have refused to explain why. A Washington spokesman would say only that the interview showed she "was not of sufficient protection interest to warrant surveillance." San Francisco police believe, however, that the federal agents were satisfied with Moore's claim that she had needed a gun for fear of reprisal from radicals for informing on their activities to the FBI. The agents were also apparently influenced by the fact that Moore had worked with...
...principle American desire was to convince Latin American nations that Cuba was a sufficient menace to warrant ending all diplomatic relations. The United States wanted to isolate Cuba politically and economically, hopefully to destroy it, and at the very least to contain its revolutionary influence...
...outside of the envelopes ("mail cover" in CIA parlance), which is legal. But apparently unknown to Postmaster General Arthur Summer field, his successors and most other top postal officials, the CIA used its mail cover to open many of the letters, which is illegal unless authorized by a search warrant. In the last full year of the New York operation, for example, eight CIA employees examined the envelopes of more than 2.3 million items of mail between the U.S. and the Soviet Union, photographed about 33,000 and opened about 8,700, most of those in the latter category, because...
...witnesses and considering more than 800 pieces of evidence, the jury retired. Lacking any direct evidence or witness placing Little and Remiro at the scene of the crime, the all-white jury argued for an extraordinary eleven days about whether the web of circumstances was tight enough to warrant conviction. Finally, last week the jurors were unanimous. They found Little and Remiro guilty of murder in Foster's death and attempted murder of Foster's assistant, who was wounded in the attack...
According to the Ernst & Ernst report, Northrop since 1971 may have spent as much as $30 million overseas for which it did not properly account. Ernst & Ernst described 17 arrangements as questionable enough to warrant study. Some seem legitimate, but others are open to grave objections. They range from the petty-$4,400 to an Iranian tax assessor to settle "a minor tax matter"-to the serious. Some examples...