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convict and aboard
This version is set aboard a convict ship bound for New South Wales, where convicts are putting on a version of The Beggar's Opera.
* Mary Wade ( 1777 – 1859 ), the youngest convict transported to Australia aboard the Lady Juliana
He served nearly two years in English prisons before being put aboard the convict ship Hougoumont for transportation to the British colony of Western Australia.
In December 1834, Leslie left London as a passenger aboard the convict transport Emma Eugenia, arriving in Sydney in May 1835.
George Hughes, a convict aboard the First Fleet, printed the playbill from Australia ’ s first printing press.

convict and one
Terminator Salvation introduces Marcus Wright, a death-row convict who donated his body to Cyberdyne Systems, who was later revived as a one of a kind Terminator with his original brain and heart placed into an endoskeleton which was then covered by a copy of his original organic tissue.
This provision enshrines the concept of autrefois convict, that no one convicted of an offence can be tried or punished a second time.
After evaluation, time and freedom of movement will be expanded until the convict can move freely outside the clinic without escort ( usually for one day at a time ).
Generally, the convict is released after being in this situation for one or two years without incident.
A plea of autrefois convict ( Law French for " previously convicted ") is one in which the defendant claims to have been previously convicted of the same offence and that he or she therefore cannot be tried for it again.
The hypothesis of innocence is only rejected when an error is very unlikely, because one doesn't want to convict an innocent defendant.
In June 1807, a convict had stowed away and escaped Sydney on one of Macarthur's vessels, and in December 1807, when that vessel returned to Sydney, the bond held to ensure compliance by shipping was deemed to be forfeited.
After two days of deliberations, all but one juror had voted to convict Guandique.
Charges were made that the jury was filled with Southern sympathizers who refused to convict one of their own.
There have also been cases where the juries have refused to convict due to their own prejudices such as the race of one of the parties in the case.
After initially pleading " not guilty " to all charges and being released on bail Osho, on the advice of his lawyers, entered an " Alford plea "— a type of guilty plea through which a suspect does not admit guilt, but does concede there is enough evidence to convict him — to one count of having a concealed intent to remain permanently in the U. S. at the time of his original visa application in 1981 and one count of having conspired to have sannyasins enter into sham marriages to acquire U. S. residency.
According to one of his lawyers, Avigdor Feldman, he believed the prosecution did not have enough evidence to convict him.
She turns out to be an Interpol agent, also on Sauvage's tail ( every major convict released from one of Sauvage's prisons in the last six months has been employed by one of his companies ).
The duo do not always " get their man ", with at least one novel ending with the villain getting away and another strongly implying that while Dalziel and Pascoe are unable to convict anyone, a series of unrelated accidents actually included at least one unprovable instance of murder.
He immediately introduced a new system under which every grant had the stipulation that for every granted the grantee would maintain free of expense to the crown one convict labourer.
In December 1854 discontent with the licensing system on the goldfields led to the rising at the Eureka Stockade, one of only two armed rebellions in Australian history ( the other being the Castle Hill convict rebellion of 1804 ).
Judge Callahan said he was giving them two forms — one for conviction and one for acquittal, but he supplied the jury with only a form to convict.
The initial grant on the north side of the river soon expanded to the north with the agreement of the partners to take charge and expense of one convict for every of land, and by purchases of the grants of Richardson, Hyndes and Burke.
Jackson, one of the prosecutors, admitted that an " undeniably flawed forensic report " was used to convict Willingham, but claimed that other reasons established guilt.
On the evening of 17 February 1796, Muir together with two convict servants, loaded up his small boat with one day ’ s provisions and stealthily rowed their way out of harbour.
Walker asked for dogs from a nearby convict camp, but one dog may have been used by a group of men acting without Walker's authority.

convict and prison
The ' Dartmoor Jailbreak ' is a yearly charity event, where members of the public ( not prisoners ) ' escape ' from the prison and must travel as far as possible in 4 days, whilst in convict clothing and without directly paying for transport.
Often, when a convict is sentenced to TBS, he first serves a prison sentence.
The convict will then be placed in a TBS-clinic after serving time in prison ( usually two-thirds of the original prison sentence, although this practice is under discussion ).
The plan's continual setbacks – including an error that led to seizing a criminally insane Army prison convict ( Harrelson ) to be their " hero " who was " shot down behind enemy lines " – do not disturb the producer, who repeatedly claims " This is nothing " while comparing the situation to a past movie-making catastrophes he averted.
Beery played the savage convict " Butch ", a role originally intended for Lon Chaney, Sr., in the highly successful 1930 prison film The Big House, for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor.
This means that a convict could be entitled to spend the rest of the sentence ( that is, until he or she dies ) outside of prison.
She first had Qi arrested and treated her like a convict ( dressed in prison garb, head shaved, and in stocks ).
The court holds out on bail as long as the reasons for custody remain ( which includes pending of the charges ), and in case of conviction until the convict starts serving prison sentence, reimburses the criminal proceedings and / or pays court ordered fine.
The former convict learned to read and studied law in prison, and even assumed his own defense, unsuccessfully appealing his conviction several times.
The prison was built with convict labor leased by the state to contractor Lorenzo P. Sanger and warden Samuel K. Casey.
** Dutch Leitner ( Donnelly Rhodes )— an escaped convict who hides out at the Tates ' after helping Chester break out of prison.
The government managed to convict Capone of tax evasion and sent him to prison in 1932.
In modern Germany the laws frown upon treating a former convict any differently from the rest of the population after the convict has finished his or her prison sentence ; in cases of rather clever and fairly minor crimes not involving violence, this feeling is shared by most of the general population.
A convict is " a person found guilty of a crime and sentenced by a court " or " a person serving a sentence in prison ", sometimes referred to in slang as simply a " con ".
San Quentin Prison set up three temporary prison camps to provide unskilled convict labor to help with road construction.
She had Qi stripped off her position, treated like a convict ( head shaved, in stocks, dressed in prison garb ) and forced to do hard labour in the form of milling rice.
The boys were separated from the main convict population and kept on Point Puer, the British Empire's first boys ' prison.
He was moved on to Albany, and punched another convict on his first day in general prison population.
The money earned by work performed goes to offset prison expenses by providing a large workforce at no cost for government projects, and at minimal convict leasing cost for private businesses
Six weeks after the Dunblane massacre in Scotland, this mass killing at the notorious former convict prison at Port Arthur horrified the Australian public and had powerful political consequences.
Finally the young man revealed that he was a paroled convict returning from a distant prison.
From about 1880, Crosby attended and supported the Helping Hand for Men ( better known as the Water Street Mission ), " America's first rescue mission ", in Manhattan, which was founded to minister to alcoholics and the unemployed by a former prostitute, Maria and Jeremiah " Jerry " McAuley, a former alcoholic, thief, and convict who had become a Christian in Sing Sing prison in 1864.
The convicts specifically denounce the French Republic which claimed, in accordance with the " advises of the European Council ", that the " enforcing of prison sentences ... has been conceived not only in order to protect society and assure the punishment of the convict, but also to favour his amendement and prepare his rehabilitation ".

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