According to Taylor,
excessive private use of computers and other electronics is another red - flag.
Not exact matches
Whatever agencies oversee non-profits, or other kinds of corporations and companies, and can respond to complaints when non-profits especially are allegedly not functioning within the public interest, or there are other issues with governance, conflicts of interest, inurement (
use of a tax - exempt non-profit for the
private benefit or
excessive benefit of someone with insider relationships), misuse of funds that were solicited to be spent on a specific designation project, etc..
The most explicit statement of these limitations is in the Constitution's first ten amendments — the Bill of Rights — which guarantee freedom of religion, speech, press, assembly, and petition, the right to bear arms, protection against the obligatory quartering of soldiers, security from unwarranted search and seizure, the right to a grand jury, protection against double jeopardy and self - incrimination, the right of due process, just compensation for
private property taken for public
use, and speedy public trial by jury without
excessive fines or bail.
Nor is there a look into reports of beatings, torture, and
excessive use of solitary confinement after the escape, recounted in news articles and in a new report by the The Correctional Association of NY, a
private watchdog group.
What other possible standard in a free and
private market of competitors could be
used for the definition of «
excessive»?