They were often simply called convicts.
Or they could be known as Jayle Birds a term used in the 18th century. This was a term restricted to the American colonies.
The term POMs also became popular, but it is a myth that it originated from the acronym "Prisoner of Mother England".
"jayle birds"
(p.90 of The American Pageant)
Dr Crippen was an American-born British homeopathic physician who was convicted of murdering his wife in 1910 in the UK.
Harold Shipman, a British doctor, was convicted of 15 counts of murder in January 2000. He was found guilty of killing patients through lethal injections of diamorphine (a powerful painkiller). Shipman later received a life sentence and was known as one of the most prolific serial killers in British history.
No. Dr. Harold Shipman was not a kidnapper; rather, he poisoned an estimated 250 of his patients, many of whom died in their homes, thinking that their beloved doctor was only doing what was best for them.
The Nuremberg Trials were 13 trials held in Nuremberg, Germany, after World War II. The first, held by an international tribunal (American, British, French, and Russian), was the "War Criminals" trial (to keep it simple, it was the trial of the "big names" in Nazism). It was followed by a series of 12 more trials held buy the United States: the Doctor's trial, the Milch trial, the Judge's trial (this is what the movie "Judgment at Nuremberg" was based on), the Pohl trial, the Flick trial, the I. G. Farbern trial, the Hostages trial, the RuSHA trial, the Einsatzgruppen trial, the Krupp trial, the Ministries trial and the High Command trial. The British and Polish also held their own trials.
Harold Shipman, also known as Dr. Death, was a British general practitioner who is considered one of the most prolific serial killers in recorded history. He was convicted of murdering 15 patients, but it is believed that he may have been responsible for over 200 deaths by administering lethal doses of prescription drugs. Shipman's crimes were predominantly committed between the 1970s and 1990s in the UK.
The British government believed it had legal authority in the colonies, based on their interpretation of the British constitution and the concept of parliamentary sovereignty. They maintained that the colonies were subject to British laws and regulations.
legal authority over colonies
The Townshend act
Delegate members from each state attended the continental congress to discuss British authority in the America colonies. Delegates from nine colonies met in 1765, and collectively declined taxation by the British Parliament on the colonies.
Delegate members from each state attended the continental congress to discuss British authority in the America colonies. Delegates from nine colonies met in 1765, and collectively declined taxation by the British Parliament on the colonies.
True
To assert British governmental authority over the colonies during the English colonial period.
Australia was previously made up of six colonies (which became states after Federation) and subject to the authority of the British Empire. None of the colonies was self-governing, but all were subject to British authority. The six colonies were New South Wales, Victoria! Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania.
To assert British governmental authority over the colonies during the English colonial period.
James Oglethorpe was a British general and also a member of Parliament. He founded the colony of Georgia in an attempt to help alleviate British problems with criminals who had nowhere to go.
The Twelve Colonies of North America were primarily ruled by the British Crown, as they were established as British colonies. Each colony had its own local government and colonial assembly, which operated under the authority of the British monarchy. Tensions between colonial leaders and British authorities eventually led to the American Revolution, wherein the colonies sought independence from British rule. The colonies eventually became the United States of America following their successful fight for independence.
This was part of the Intolerable Acts of 1774 and was based on the idea that British soldiers would not get a fair hearing in the colonies where the people were unfairly biased against the British soldiers. It was also a nod to the Boston Massacre trials in 1770 where colonists convicted two British soldiers of manslaughter and the perceived illegitimacy of this trial by British authorities.