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Page "Maurice Papon" ¶ 14
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confidential and report
`` I thought the entire report was going to be confidential from beginning to end.
Before Wright returned to Paris, he gave a confidential report to the United States consulate in Accra on some of the things he had learned about Nkrumah and his political party.
Lubbers asked Max van der Stoel, former Dutch high commissioner for minorities, to comment on the confidential report.
The report from the Finnish team, however, was kept confidential by the EU until long after the war, and the team leader, Helena Ranta, issued a press release at the time containing her " personal opinion " and indicating differing and opposite findings.
Since 1999 each bank has also been required to submit to an annual audit by an external accounting firm, which produces a confidential report to the bank and a summary statement for the bank's annual report.
Immediately following the Chilean coup of 1973, Augusto Pinochet was made aware of a confidential economic plan known as El ladrillo ( literally,the brick ”), so called because the report was “ as thick as a brick ”.
On Nov 1, 2010, examiner Joshua R. Hochberg from McKenna Long & Aldridge LLP presented his long awaited report, but it did not meet the expectations of the court, since the report was based on unsworn interviews and confidential attorney-client work.
Church officials had made the claims as part of a confidential pre-sentencing report.
This is a confidential report ; the petitioner does not get a full copy of this report.
The operations of the Financial Regulator were severely criticised in a report marked " strictly confidential and not for publication ", as being poor value for money.
Despite his stance against the invasion of Iraq, on receiving a copy of a confidential memo between Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Tony Blair, and US President George W. Bush, he chose to report the leak to the police rather than expose what was said.
Failing that, Miller's lawyers asked that she be sent to a women's facility in Danbury, Connecticut, nearer to " Ms. Miller's 76-year-old husband ", retired book publisher Jason Epstein, who lives in New York City, and whose state of health was the subject of a confidential medical report filed by Miller's attorneys.
When the details of this supposedly confidential agreement were leaked to the press, Caledonian, which had expressed its interest in acquiring BUA itself and had begun negotiations with BUA's senior management on 5 March 1970 to make an offer to take over the ailing airline to create the " Second Force " as envisaged in the Edwards report, immediately applied to the ATLB for the revocation of all of BUA's scheduled route licences, requesting them to be transferred to itself.
The International Committee of the Red Cross stated in its confidential report to the coalition authority that this constituted a " serious violation of the Third and Fourth Geneva Conventions ".
The CBSA Border Watch toll free info line offers citizens the opportunity to report suspicious cross border activity directly to the Agency in a direct and confidential manner.
In November 2001, the provincial media obtained a confidential government report recommending 40 – 45 % cuts in provincial child-care programs.
In a confidential 1978 report, the tobacco industry described increasing public concerns about second-hand smoke as " the most dangerous development to the viability of the tobacco industry that has yet occurred.
On 10 March 2012 it was reported that the SKA Site Advisory Committee had made a confidential report in February that the South African bid was stronger.
As well, the employer may be concerned that the employee could make a negative report to public: by divulging things about the company to others, thereby hurting their business ; or that the employee may disclose trade secrets: An ex-employee may remove materials or divulge confidential information from the former employer and use it with another employer or in an independent business.
A confidential report in 2002 expressed serious concern over the security of the voting machines.
Before Wright left the Gold Coast, he gave a confidential report on Nkrumah to the American consul and later reported on Padmore himself to the American Embassy in Paris.

confidential and from
That the emperor sincerely sympathized with Alexei, and suspected Peter of harbouring murderous designs against his son, is plain from his confidential letter to George I of Great Britain, whom he consulted on this delicate affair.
Permissions protect against unauthorized tampering or destruction of information in files, and keep private information confidential from unauthorized users.
The public spotlight fell on GCHQ in late 2003 and early 2004 following the sacking of Katharine Gun after she leaked to The Observer a confidential email from agents at the American National Security Agency addressed to GCHQ agents about the wire-tapping of UN delegates in the run-up to the 2003 Iraq war.
In 2012 it was reported that confidential agreements and negotiations had been entered into by the Haitian government granting licenses for exploration or mining of gold and associated metals such as copper for over 1, 000 square miles in the mineralized zone stretching from east to west across northern Haiti.
While the President was recovering in the hospital, McFarlane met with him and told him that representatives from Israel had contacted the National Security Agency to pass on confidential information from what Reagan later described as the " moderate " Iranian faction opposed to the Ayatollah's hardline anti-American policies.
Members of the U. S. Congress are not exempt from the laws that ban insider trading, however, they generally do not have a confidential or fiduciary relationship with the source of the information they receive and accordingly, do not meet the definition of an " insider ".
In 1984, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled in the case of Dirks v. SEC that tippees ( receivers of second-hand information ) are liable if they had reason to believe that the tipper had breached a fiduciary duty in disclosing confidential information and the tipper received any personal benefit from the disclosure.
The Dirks case also defined the concept of " constructive insiders ," who are lawyers, investment bankers and others who receive confidential information from a corporation while providing services to the corporation.
* the exclusions from what must be kept confidential.
In 2003, The Guardian newspaper found a confidential communique from John to Catholic bishops, allegedly mandating confidentiality in matters of pederasty with the threat of excommunication.
An envoy from another nation is traditionally treated as a guest, their communications with their home nation treated as confidential, and their freedom from coercion and subjugation by the host nation treated as essential.
The records of loyalty review hearings and investigations were supposed to be confidential, but Hoover routinely gave evidence from them to congressional committees such as HUAC.
A confidential informant is someone who claimed to have witnessed an event or have hearsay information, but whose identity is being withheld from at least one party ( typically the criminal defendant ).
The information from the confidential informant may have been used by a police officer or other official acting as a hearsay witness to obtain a search warrant.
While terms of the settlement were kept confidential, West Virginia's athletic director said that the settlement would be paid only from private donations and money the athletes raise themselves.
It is intended to protect users ' personal freedom, privacy, and ability to conduct confidential business by keeping their internet activities from being monitored.
If the shredder doesn't cut paper small enough, confidential documents could be removed from the trash, reassembled and read.
James Shapiro interprets her theory both in terms of the cultural tensions of her historical milieu, and as consequential on an intellectual and emotional crisis that unfolded as she both broke with her Puritan upbringing and developed a deep confidential relationship with a fellow lodger, Alexander MacWhorter, a young theology graduate from Yale, which was subsequently interrupted by her brother.
To prevent further disclosure of confidential information, Guinness prohibited its employees from publishing any papers regardless of the contained information.
The charges stemmed from Rutter publicly posting confidential prototypes for upcoming Magic: The Gathering card sets to the MTGSalvation forums, ten months before the cards were to be released.
A bodyguard ( or close protection officer ) is a type of security operative or government agent who protects a person or persons — usually a public, wealthy, or politically important figure ( s ) — from danger: generally theft, assault, kidnapping, homicide, harassment, loss of confidential information, threats, or other criminal offences.

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