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Page "Social Security Administration" ¶ 29
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warrant and time
In respect of the High Court, historically a writ of latitat would have been issued, but now a bench warrant is issued, authorizing the tipstaff to arrange for the arrest of the individual, and imprisonment until the date and time the court appoints to next sit.
Police in the United States are also prohibited from holding criminal suspects for more than a reasonable amount of time ( usually 24 – 48 hours ) before arraignment, using torture, abuse or physical threats to extract confessions, using excessive force to effect an arrest, and searching suspects ' bodies or their homes without a warrant obtained upon a showing of probable cause.
He did, however, manage to warrant himself another prison sentence ; this time for nearly a year.
In Arizona v. Gant, 556 U. S. ___ ( 2009 ), the Supreme Court ruled that a law enforcement officer needs a warrant before searching a motor vehicle after an arrest of an occupant of that vehicle, unless at the time of the search the person being arrested is unsecured and within reaching distance of the passenger compartment of the vehicle or police officers have reason to believe that the evidence for the crime for which the person is being arrested will be found in the vehicle.
However, other rooms may not be searched absent a search warrant or other exigent circumstances, as the arrestee would be unlikely to access weapons or evidence in those rooms at the time of arrest.
As stated in Brewer v. Williams,, the right to counsel “ at least that a person is entitled to the help of a lawyer at or after the time that judicial proceedings have been initiated against him, whether by formal charge, preliminary hearing, indictment, information, or arraignment .” Brewer goes on to conclude that once adversary proceeding have begun against a defendant, he has a right to legal representation when the government interrogates him and that when a defendant is arrested, “ arraigned on arrest warrant before a judge ,” and “ committed by the court to confinement ,” “ here can be no doubt that judicial proceedings ha been initiated .”
** Women's suffrage: In defiance of the law, American suffragist Susan B. Anthony votes for the first time ( on November 18 she is served an arrest warrant and in the subsequent trial she is fined $ 100 – she never pays the fine ).
Equity warrants are options issued by the company that allow the holder of the warrant to purchase a specific number of shares at a specified price within a specified time.
By this time torture was not routine in England and a special warrant from King James I was needed before he could be tortured.
By exception the three surviving lodges that formed the world's first known Grand Lodge in London ( today called the United Grand Lodge of England ) have the unique privilege to operate as time immemorial i. e. without such warrant ; only one other lodge operates without a warrant-this is the Grand Stewards ' Lodge in London, although it is not also entitled to the " time immemorial " title.
Even when the fuze didn ’ t separate and the system functioned correctly, damage to the interior was little different from the solid shot, and so did not warrant the additional time and cost of producing a shell version.
" No information was given at the time for the basis of the search warrant.
In 1770, the congregations merged, with Metuchen getting 2 / 5 of the pastor's services and Woodbridge 3 / 5s ; by 1772 Metuchen had grown sufficiently to warrant 50 % of his time.
The typical use of braces is for idiopathic curves that are not grave enough to warrant surgery, but they may also be used to prevent the progression of more severe curves in young children, to buy the child time to grow before performing surgery, which would prevent further growth in the part of the spine affected.
Czech court may issue an arrest warrant when it is not achievable to summon or bring in for questioning a charged person and at the same time there is one of the reasons for detention ( i. e. concern that the charged person would either flee, interfere with the proceedings or continue criminal activity, see Remand in the Czech Republic ).
Usually, the government agency charged with carrying out an execution, normally the state's Department of Corrections or the U. S. Bureau of Prisons in federal cases, has a limited time frame, normally about 60 days, from the date the warrant is signed, to complete the execution process, or the warrant expires and the condemned person is returned to the death row cell, where he or she will await another execution date.
At the time Brady arrested them, the two men were trying to serve a warrant on him for his suspected role in looting Tunstall's store after the Englishman's death, as well as against his posse members for the murder of Tunstall.
The organizers decided the bobsled events did not warrant the cost to build a venue, so for the first and only time bobsled was not on the Winter Olympic program.
Also, if a signal meets only the peak hour warrant, the advantages during that time may not outweigh the disadvantages during the rest of the day.
A warrant was also issued later for Thibault, but although he was seen again on the Tuesday morning following the fire ( two days later ), by the time the bailiffs set out to arrest him he had disappeared and was never seen again in New France.
At the same time, the red ensign ( which was designated in 1864 as the flag for merchant shipping ) was used by merchantmen of those colonies which obtained an Admiralty warrant.
The more time remaining until expiry, the more time for the underlying security to appreciate, which, in turn, will increase the price of the warrant ( unless it depreciates ).

warrant and anything
They may, for example, legally search any suspect who has been arrested, or their vehicles, home or business premises, without a warrant, and may seize anything they find in a search as evidence.
He plainly told them, when witnesses were produced against him, that he came not thither with an intention to deny anything he had done, but rather to bring it to light, owning his name subscribed to the warrant for executing the King, to be written by himself ; charging divers of those who sat on the Bench, as his judges, to have been formerly as active for the cause, in which he had engaged, as himself or any other person ; affirming that he had not acted by any other motive than the principles of conscience and justice ; for proof of which he said it was well known, he had chosen to be separated from his family, and to suffer a long imprisonment rather than to comply with those who had abused the power they had assumed to the oppression of the people.
" Let me say at once that no court in this land has any power to issue a search warrant to enter a man's house so as to see if there are papers or documents there which are of an incriminating nature, whether libels or infringements of copyright or anything else of the kind.
The judge said that the claim of a vendetta was " arrant nonsense ", and that, " the idea that this organization is a sufficient threat to anything that would warrant the government bringing a prosecution to silence them just defies human experience.
The Police Amendment Act ( No. 70 ) of 1965 empowered the police to search without warrant any person, receptacle, vehicle, aircraft, or premise within one mile of any national border and to seize anything found during such a search.
" Upon entering the manor, he makes a very Holmes-like statement as he asks Cynthia to take her time, " begin at the beginning and don ’ t leave anything out ," despite the fact that nothing has happened that would warrant such a statement.

warrant and more
I do not suppose you ever heard of F. Scott Fitzgerald, living or dead, and moreover I do not suppose that, even if you had, his legend would have seemed to you to warrant more than a cluck of disapproval.
Whether this whole process resembles animal apoptosis closely enough to warrant using the name apoptosis ( as opposed to the more general programmed cell death ) is unclear.
Such visits are supposed to be universally horrible events that often end in death for one or more of the living, which would then warrant the exhumation of the draugr's tomb by a hero.
The judgment can do no more than the facts presented to it warrant.
Search warrants were also expanded, with the Act amending Title III of the Stored Communications Access Act to allow the FBI to gain access to stored voicemail through a search warrant, rather than through the more stringent wiretap laws.
The viola's less responsive strings and the heavier bow warrant a somewhat different bowing technique, and a violist has to lean more intensely on the strings.
Finally, despite the fact that Secretary of Labor William B. Wilson insisted that more than membership in an organization was required for a warrant, Hoover worked with more compliant Labor officials and overwhelmed Labor staff to get the warrants he wanted.
These findings, however, were contested a few years later by Catherine Forster, who reanalyzed Triceratops material more comprehensively and concluded that the remains fell into two species, T. horridus and T. prorsus, although the distinctive skull of T. (" Nedoceratops ") hatcheri differed enough to warrant a separate genus.
The new warrant issued in 1682 reads: " Sir George Downing ... authorised to build new and more houses further westward on the grounds granted him by the patent of 1663 / 4 Feb. 23.
" Roy Oliver Disney had misgivings about the project, doubting that it was " big enough in caliber and natural draft " to warrant a budget over $ 1 million and more than twenty-five minutes of animation, but in June 1944, Walt hired Southern-born writer Dalton Reymond to write the screenplay, and he met frequently with King Vidor, whom he was trying to interest in directing the live-action sequences.
A more definite standard of proof ( often probable cause ) would be required to warrant a more thorough stop / search.
In patients over 45 with more than two weeks of the above symptoms, the odds for peptic ulceration are high enough to warrant rapid investigation by esophagogastroduodenoscopy.
Far more subgenera would seem to warrant recognition, with Leptostemonum being the only one that can at present be clearly subdivided into sections.
Southern and Midwestern states generally tend to have more counties than Western or Northeastern states, as many Northeastern states are not large enough in area to warrant a large number of counties, and many Western states were sparsely populated when counties were created.
Plantinga has also developed a more comprehensive epistemological account of the nature of warrant which allows for the existence of God as a basic belief.
In 2007, Congress amended FISA to “ allow the government to monitor more communications without a warrant .” In 2008, President George W. Bush expanded the surveillance of internet traffic to and from the U. S. government by signing a national security directive.
IGN rated the game 7. 9 / 10 ( the same score they gave the first game ), saying that while the game had more content, and it " sticks with the same winning formula ... there really isn't enough new here to warrant another purchase ".
Only one WO1 / CWO holds the appointment of RSM in a regiment or battalion, making him the senior warrant officer ; in a unit with more than one WO1, the RSM is considered to be " first amongst equals ".
* Gearing ( leverage ): A warrant's " gearing " is the way to ascertain how much more exposure you have to the underlying shares using the warrant as compared to the exposure you would have if you buy shares through the market.

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