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Mid-July and from
* Mid-July – Henry Morgan sacks Portobello and Panama City ; the lack of booty from the latter attack leads to the city being burned.
She exited the role of Whitney on September 6, 2007, the second to last day the show aired on NBC but returned for the show's finale episodes briefly from Mid-July 2008 to early August 2008 in a guest appearance.

Mid-July and with
Mid-July 2007 saw the release of the 380 Series III, with range and price alterations designed to attract further sales and increase private buyer interest.

Mid-July and was
Operation Red Wings ( often incorrectly referred to as Operation Redwing and / or Operation Red Wing ) was a combined / joint military operation that took place in the Pech District of Afghanistan's Kunar Province, on the slopes of a mountain named Sawtalo Sar, approximately 20 miles west of Kunar's provincial capital of Asadabad, in Late June through Mid-July 2005.

Mid-July and .
Mid-July.
Activity continued through July, when a tropical depression formed over the southern Lesser Antilles in Mid-July.

constable and from
The young constable with bulging eyes, fourth from right, is Arbuckle's nephew Al St. John.
Arthur Conan Doyle wrote in his 1904 novel The Adventure of the Six Napoleons, " It seemed to be one of those senseless acts of Hooliganism which occur from time to time, and it was reported to the constable on the beat as such ".
The Book of Pluscarden describes ' a detestable split and most unworthy difference arising from jealosy ' within the Scottish camp and the historian Michael Brown explains that a contemporary source has James appointing his young and inexperienced cousin Robert Stewart of Atholl as the constable of the host ahead of the experienced march wardens the earls of Douglas and Angus.
John Okey, one of the regicides who signed the death warrant of Charles I, was brought back from Holland along with Miles Corbet, friend and lawyer to Cromwell, and John Barkstead, former constable of the Tower of London.
David fails to convince the constable that she is making everything up " from motion pictures she's seen.
The castle was captured on 31 October 1321 by the forces of Edward II from Margaret de Clare, Baroness Badlesmere, wife of the castle's constable, Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere who had left her in charge during his absence.
It is revealed in the final episode of the British science fiction and police procedural drama television series Ashes to Ashes ( and by extension its prequel Life on Mars ) that Gene Hunt is the soul of a murdered constable, and part of a supernatural limbo populated by other dead or dying police officers ( often due to injuries sustained in the line of duty ), many of them displaced from their original time periods.
The book is written from the perspectives of several people-Merlin Van Tornhout and Johnny Reeves, both members of the Ku Klux Klan, Sara Chickering, a farmer, Esther Hirsh, a six-year-old Jewish girl, Leonora Sutter, an African American girl, Iris Weaver, a resteraunteur, Harvey and Viola Pettibone, who are shop owners, Reynard Alexander, a newspaper editor, Fitzgerald Flitt, the doctor, and Percelle Johnson, the town constable.
Gerald de Windsor, ancestor of the FitzGeralds of Ireland, was constable of Pembroke Castle from 1102.
A constable policed the town, although without a vehicle he relied on the generosity of locals to transport him from place to place.
In the powder room the constable was found with his throat cut ; he had tried to blow up the ship but his own crew killed him first and drenched the powder, claiming afterwards the man had cut his own throat from pure frustration.
However, Melisende also appointed Manasses of Hierges, constable of Jerusalem, as an advisor, and the two essentially excluded Baldwin from power.
Historically, the title comes from the Latin comes stabuli ( count of the stables ) and originated from the Eastern Roman Empire ; originally, the constable was the officer responsible for keeping the horses of a lord or monarch.
The position of constable originated from the Byzantine Empire ; by the 5th century AD the Count of the Stable (, ), was responsible for the keeping of horses at the imperial court.
Under the Duke of York's government the constable was elected from one of four overseers of the town or parish.
A constable requires an extensive knowledge of civil law, and the criminal law aspects that may arise from civil law violations.
Modern-day New Jersey police officers inherit their authority from the constable.
The duties of a Texas constable generally include providing bailiffs for the justice of the peace court ( s ) within his precinct and serving process issued therefrom and from any other court.
Every police station is to have a Special Branch head constable or Assistant Sub-Inspector ( ASI ) ( working plain clothes or Mufti ), he would be observing the society in general, and also taking reports from the uniformed police constables on general patrol.
Harlech was established with a garrison of 36 men: a constable, 30 men, including 10 crossbowmen, a chaplain, a smith, carpenter and stonemason, and Master James was rewarded by being made the constable of Harlech from 1290 – 93.
Initially, Dixon continued in the same role as in the film The Blue Lamp, a constable based at the fictitious Dock Green police station in the East End of London, which replaced Paddington Green police station from the film.
One night, in the midst of a fierce storm, IRB leader Tim O ' Leary ( Barry Foster )– who had killed a police constable earlier – and a small band of comrades arrive in Ryan's pub and strong-arm him into helping them recover a shipment of German arms from the storm.

constable and Village
The Village of Auburn was incorporated in 1849, divided into wards, and governed under a town board and constable.

constable and visit
He and his half-brother William de Roumare sent their wives to visit the constable ’ s wife there and then arrived ( dressed in ordinary clothes and escorted by three knights ), apparently to fetch the ladies.

constable and with
On returning to Jyväskylä in 1923 to establish his own architect's office, Aalto busied himself with a number of single-family homes, all designed in the classical style, such as the manor-like house for his mother's cousin Terho Manner in Töysa in 1923, a summer villa for the Jyväskylä chief constable in 1923 and the Alatalo farmhouse in Tarvaala in 1924.
Legend has it that, following Ward's stage performance, he, Mark Twain, and Dan De Quille were taking a drunken rooftop tour of Virginia City until a town constable threatened to blast all three of them with a shotgun loaded with rock salt.
The emperor arrived with the clear intent of stamping his authority on the kingdom, but was treated cordially by the native barons until a dispute arose between him and the constable of Cyprus, John of Ibelin.
John of Dunois, La Hire and Poton de Xaintrailles were partisans of La Trémoille, while Charles de Bourbon ( Count of Clermont ) ( son of the imprisoned duke of Bourbon ), the marshal Jean de Brosse ( Sieur de Boussac ) and John Stewart of Darnley ( head of the Scottish auxiliary forces ), were lined up with the constable.
About the same time the Criminal Investigation Department ( CID ) in Belfast was significantly expanded, with a detective head constable being appointed to head the CID force in each of the five Belfast police districts.
In the 1904 Sherlock Holmes story " The Adventure of the Second Stain ", the term is still used in a completely non-sexual context ( Inspector Lestrade is threatening a misbehaving constable with " finding himself in Queer Street ", i. e., in this context, being severely punished ).
Marcel demanded the dismissal of seven royal ministers, their replacement by a Council of 28, made of nobles, clergy and bourgeois, and the release of Charles II of Navarre, a leading Norman noble with a claim on the French throne who had been imprisoned by John for the murder of his constable.
Instead of securing the tie with knots, the constable held on to the free end of the rope and walked behind the prisoner to keep him or her under control as the prisoner was taken for an interrogation which could involve the application of one or more forms of judicial torture to elicit a confession.
Townspeople, with the complicity of the town constable, broke into the local jail where Stuart was being held, beat Stuart and started a fire.
The settlement was also known as Drake's Corners, with G. Drake as constable and J. S.
He and his mother had become increasingly estranged since 1150, and Baldwin blamed the constable Manasses for interfering with his legal succession.
Most constables in modern jurisdictions are law enforcement officers ; in the United Kingdom, Commonwealth of Nations and some European countries, a constable is the lowest rank of police officer ( it is also, when preceded by the term ' sworn ', used to describe any police officer with arrest and other powers ), while in the United States a constable is generally an elected peace officer with lesser jurisdiction than a sheriff.
Historically, a constable could also refer to a castellan, the officer charged with the defense of a castle.
The Serious Organised Crime Agency ( SOCA ) can also designate their officers with the power of a constable and many police officers that joined the agency when it was formed were immediately given such a designation.
Often the enacting legislation of the state conferred a police officer with the powers of a constable, the most important of these powers being the common law power of arrest.
In Alaska, a constable is an appointed official with limited police powers.
When the state courts were unified in 2000, with the superior court fulfilling all judicial functions, the need for the position of constable was eliminated.
All counties are required to provide their constables with at least two complete uniforms, some type of motor vehicle identification which clearly indicates that the motor vehicle is being used by a constable in his official capacity, and a blue flashing light for use on official duty.

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