Sentences with phrase «illegal cigarettes on»

The appointment of a special prosecutor was prompted by a number of recent incidents where civilians were killed by police, including Eric Garner, a Staten Island man who police put in a choke hold after Garner was accused of selling illegal cigarettes on the sidewalk.

Not exact matches

Hey, Ms. Siegel, why don't you have all alcohol banded that way we can be sure there are no under age drinkers; why not have all cigarettes off the market that way we will know no one under 21 is smoking; why shouldn't ID's be required to vote that way we will know there are no illegals voting; you just keep us posted on what you believe we should have and not have.
Sanders, who has already come out against a tax on soda, hinted that cigarettes should be made illegal.
The incident was caught on a controversial video in which Garner is seen being wrestled to the ground by officers for selling illegal cigarettes — before being heard saying «I can't breathe» nearly a dozen times.
Bronx state Sen. Jeff Klein is taking on illegal online cigarette vendors, which evade the city's high tobacco taxes.
They also work alongside humans, as they are often employed in search and rescue work, as well as sniffing drugs and prohibited items such as illegal DVDs, cigarettes and so on.
There are really two issues that must be considered when asking the provocative question about whether potentially precluding an employee on the basis of an addiction to cigarettes would be a violation of that individual's rights under the Ontario Human Rights Code: (1) is the practice illegal; and (2) if not always, then when?
The Health Minister's justifications are even tougher to swallow with Ms. Aglukaaq explaining that, «baggies of cheap, illegal tobacco can make it easier for children and teens to get cigarettes into their hands and start smoking, which obviously has a negative impact on their health.»
At the moment, the Commissioner was out on the patio having an illegal cigarette in the corner that shielded him best from the wind.
Assessments conducted at earlier phases are specified in previous articles.7, 8 At the 15 - year follow - up assessment, adolescents completed interviews that measured whether they had been adjudicated a person in need of supervision (PINS) resulting from incorrigible behavior such as recurrent truancy or destroying parents» property; their frequency of running away from home; and the number of times they had been stopped by the police, arrested, convicted of a crime or of probation violations, and sent to youth correctional facilities.14 They also reported on their disruptive behavior in school; number of school suspensions; delinquent and aggressive behavior outside school; experience of sexual intercourse; rates of pregnancy; lifetime number of sexual partners; and frequency of using cigarettes, alcohol, and illegal drugs during the 6 - month period prior to the 15 - year interview.15
Parents were asked questions about their children's behavioral problems (the Achenbach scale); school suspensions; arrests; and use of cigarettes, alcohol, and illegal drugs, including the effect of alcohol and other drugs on their children's lives.
More precisely, The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) reports «70 % of teens have tried alcohol by their senior year in high school, 50 % have abused an illegal drug, 40 % have smoked cigarettes, and 20 % have used prescription drugs for recreational, or for nonmedical purposes.»
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