Yes. For exapmle. No on e sees you get shot, no bullets recovered, but you say, that guy shot me and the jury believes you.
Yes they can!
To convict is to find someone guilty of a crime through a legal process, resulting in a formal judgment. To condemn is to express strong disapproval or judgment against someone's actions or behavior, often in a moral or ethical context.
The 5th Amendment to the Constitution stated that the federal government had to use due process, which is protection from unfair governmental action, and that one can not be forced to testify against one's self in the court of law.
A statement is made by one person and quoted by another.
Convict cichlids lay hundreds of eggs in one spawning.
According to their website, their mission statement is "To inspire and nurture the human spirit- one person, one cup, and one neighborhood at a time."
There isn't one. Are you thinking of the convict in Measure for Measure? His name is Barnardine.
Yes, you can be convicted.The issue there is whether the police were acting on the statement in good faith or if they knew the statement to be false. If the police were not acting in good faith (eg suborning perjury to obtain the statement), or failed to obtain a warrant at all, any evidence obtained from that search may be deemed to be inadmissible. But generally one person's statement would not be enough for the police to obtain a warrant but also some sort of actual evidence.
An empathy statement serves to clarify and to reinforce the feelings that the other person is feeling. In rephrasing what the other person is saying, one is clarifying what you hear is correct. A typical empathy statement contains 2 parts - one part that labels the feeling, and a second part that lets the person know that you understand why he's feeling that way.
An empathy statement serves to clarify and to reinforce the feelings that the other person is feeling. In rephrasing what the other person is saying, one is clarifying what you hear is correct. A typical empathy statement contains 2 parts - one part that labels the feeling, and a second part that lets the person know that you understand why he's feeling that way.
He doesn't have one, he's a convict.
Pip felt grateful and touched by the convict protecting him, as it showed a sense of humanity and kindness despite the convict's rough exterior. It also made Pip question his previous assumptions about the convict's character.