Sentences with phrase «detain people if»

Liberal Democrats are awaiting the report into the incident by independent terrorism reviewer David Anderson but they are already making it clear that they sympathise with the idea that the police should lose the ability to detain people if they have no suspicion about their activity.

Not exact matches

The law allows local officials to be charged with misdemeanors if they knowingly fail to comply with the detainer requests, and ensures localities can't ban police officers from questioning people on their immigration statuses if they are arrested or detained.
If it gets this definition wrong, vulnerable people, like torture survivors, could be wrongly detained for immigration purposes, causing significant pain and distress.
Under the liberal Democratic mayor, the city booted Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials from Rikers Island and has only honored the federal agency's requests it detain a suspect if that person has committed one of 170 violent felony offenses.
Governor Ayodele Fayose of Ekiti State, on Friday, challenged President Muhammadu Buhari to direct the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to charge the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh to court if the commission was sure of evidences of fraud against him, saying «the EFCC appears to be operating a system in which an accused person is first arrested, detained endlessly while the anti-corruption agency goes about looking for evidence.»
In the absence of a warrant, police can detain someone if there is probable cause to believe the person has re-entered the country after being removed and also has been convicted of a felony.
If people do not want cats to be killed and cleaned up as if they were nothing but garbage, then they ought to fund Trap Neuter DETAIN shelters, where these cats can not only be taken out of their unnatural place in the food chain, but will be protected from humans with malicious intent, as well as accidents with things like carIf people do not want cats to be killed and cleaned up as if they were nothing but garbage, then they ought to fund Trap Neuter DETAIN shelters, where these cats can not only be taken out of their unnatural place in the food chain, but will be protected from humans with malicious intent, as well as accidents with things like carif they were nothing but garbage, then they ought to fund Trap Neuter DETAIN shelters, where these cats can not only be taken out of their unnatural place in the food chain, but will be protected from humans with malicious intent, as well as accidents with things like cars.
The amendments, which the Standing Committee of National People's Congress passed on Thursday after two years of debate, will allow authorities to detain company bosses for 15 days if they [continue reading...]
«If we can not remove or detain people fairly and in accordance with the rule of law, we fail to live up to the standards we expect of others.
If they yell stop, a reasonable person would believe they are not free to leave, which is the moment you are legally detained.
If a person is not granted bail then they will be detained in custody until they stand trial.
This power allows the police to detain people for investigation «if there are reasonable grounds to suspect in all the circumstances that the individual is connected to a particular crime and that such detention is necessary.»
In the United States, so - called Miranda rights are named after the US Supreme Court decision of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 US 436 (1966) that determined that a person detained by law enforcement and interrogated must be made aware of the right to remain silent, the right to consult with an attorney and have the attorney present during questioning, and the right to have an attorney appointed if they can't afford one... [more]
The provision allows for enhanced credit if the circumstances allow it «unless the reason for detaining the person in custody was stated in the record.»
This can be increased to 1.5 days «if circumstances justify it,» unless a person is detained pre-sentence because of his or her criminal record, or due to criminal behaviour while on bail.
(3.1) Despite subsection (3), if the circumstances justify it, the maximum is one and one - half days for each day spent in custody unless the reason for detaining the person in custody was stated in the record under subsection 515 (9.1) or the person was detained in custody under subsection 524 (4) or (8).
Giving the leading judgment, Lord Lloyd - Jones observed the centrality of Hardial Singh principles which stipulate that (i) the authorities must intend to deport the person and can only use the detention power for that purpose, (ii) the deportee may only be detained for a reasonable period, (iii) if it becomes apparent that the authorities will not be able to effect deportation within a reasonable period then it should not seek to exercise the power of detention, and (iv) the authorities should act with reasonable diligence and expedition to effect removal.
Lord Justice Lloyd Jones held that «While I readily accept the fundamental importance of the guarantees provided by Article 5, it does not follow that Article 5 must be equated for all purposes with Articles 2, 3 and 4... In the present state of the Strasbourg jurisprudence, enforced disappearance cases are acknowledged to give rise to an investigative obligation because where agents of the State have assumed control over an individual it is incumbent on the authorities to account for his or her whereabouts... I can see no reason in principle why it should be extended to all cases in which a person has been detained in the absence of judicial scrutiny or control, even if the detention is not secret or unacknowledged.
It would be perverse if the law was such that in order to be lawfully able to detain a person to prevent their imminent commission of an offence, the police must harbour a purpose of continuing the detention, after the risk has passed, until such time as the person could be brought before a court with a view to being bound over to keep the peace in the future.
Time is spent in these workshops reviewing transcripts of bail hearings and discussing whether an accused person should be detained and, if released, the type and conditions of release, and domestic violence issues.
(1) Subject to subsection (1.1), if a person who has been arrested without warrant by a peace officer is taken into custody, or if a person who has been arrested without warrant and delivered to a peace officer under subsection 494 (3) or placed in the custody of a peace officer under subsection 163.5 (3) of the Customs Act is detained in custody under subsection 503 (1) for an offence described in paragraph 496 (a), (b) or (c), or any other offence that is punishable by imprisonment for five years or less, and has not been taken before a justice or released from custody under any other provision of this Part, the officer in charge or another peace officer shall, as soon as practicable,
What you do with it is determine if a person is being legally detained, so the person holding the person must bring them to the court.
The name comes from Terry v. Ohio in which the Supreme Court held that police may briefly detain a person whom they reasonably suspect is involved in criminal activity; the Court also held that police may do a limited search of the suspect's outer garments for weapons if they have a reasonable and articulable suspicion that the person detained may be «armed and dangerous.»
In the United States, so - called Miranda rights are named after the US Supreme Court decision of Miranda v. Arizona, 384 US 436 (1966) that determined that a person detained by law enforcement and interrogated must be made aware of the right to remain silent, the right to consult with an attorney and have the attorney present during questioning, and the right to have an attorney appointed if they can't afford one.
If the person is intoxicated, the police may detain that person for longer than four hours until they believe the person is no longer intoxicated.
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