Sentences with phrase «penitentiary as»

(b) a member of the Correctional Service of Canada who is designated as a peace officer pursuant to Part I of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act, and a warden, deputy warden, instructor, keeper, jailer, guard and any other officer or permanent employee of a prison other than a penitentiary as defined in Part I of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act,
Players will explore the depths of the island penitentiary as Batman investigates and realizes that there is more to the henchman uprising than initially meets the eye.

Not exact matches

Schools educated young males in the new civility, factories sublimated productive energies, and prisons were reconfigured as «penitentiaries» intended to lead them to internalize remorse.
A project of the State Game and Fish Department, it was built with penitentiary labor and installed under the authority of the New Mexico Secretary of State, who handles such official items as the state's official flower (yucca), official mammal (black bear) and official fish (cutthroat trout).
My pulse began to race as I realized I was now in the depths of a maximum - security penitentiary.
As Josephs puts it: Slipping a shiv into your neighbor's back might play in the penitentiary, but it probably won't earn you any status points in Grosse Pointe.
Sporting a salt - and - pepper goatee to complement his grey prison attire, Schwarzenegger cuts quite the figure as a philosophical con, running the penitentiary in all but name and ultimately aiding in Stallone's ambitious break - out.
The pair also likes to play pranks on their teachers as a way to cheer up their fellow students at their penitentiary - like school.
Despite his own unjust incarceration, the elderly man maintains his decorum as a gentleman while chipping away at the rocky floor of his penitentiary.
The Stanford Prison Experiment (R for profanity, sexual references and abusive behavior) Psychological thriller inspired by the 1971 study conducted by Professor Philip Zimbardo (Billy Crudup) in which college students were enlisted to serve as guards and inmates in a mock penitentiary.
Inside, he was home, fashioning his penitentiary confines as a «hotel» where he could finally be himself — which is to say, finally let loose with maniac violent tendencies epitomized by his new nickname Charles Bronson.
The penitentiary system around the nation has exploded as a result prior to NCLB.
The state statute is very similarly worded, but allows such acts to be treated as a felony calling for imprisonment of up to one year in a county jail or up to five years in a state penitentiary and / or a fine of up to $ 500.00.
About Alcatraz Beyond its legacy as a world - famous former federal penitentiary (1934 — 63) that once held notorious criminals like Al Capone, Alcatraz has undergone numerous incarnations that have contributed to its unique and deeply layered history.
«While the Island is perhaps best known for its legacy as one of the toughest penitentiaries in American history, there is much more to learn during an Alcatraz visit.
About Alcatraz Beyond its legacy as a world - famous former federal penitentiary (1934 — 63) that once held notorious criminals like gangster Al Capone, Alcatraz has undergone numerous incarnations that have contributed to its unique and deeply layered history.
A ride aboard the historic Ferrocarril Austral Fueguino, which restarted operations in 1994, offers visitors a glimpse into Ushuaia's penitentiary past, as well as stunning vistas of Isla Grande's rugged peaks and lush valleys.
SAN FRANCISCO, March 19, 2007: During its 29 years as the toughest and most feared federal penitentiary in America, Alcatraz was «home» to many of the most notorious criminals and gangsters in U.S. history.
Beyond its notoriety as a world - famous former federal penitentiary (1934 - 63) that once held criminals like AI Capone, Alcatraz has undergone numerous incarnations that have contributed to its unique and deeply layered history.
Installed across four locations on Alcatraz and on view from September 27, 2014, through April 26, 2015, the exhibition is inspired by the island's layered history as a 19th - century military fortress, notorious federal penitentiary, significant site of Native American history, and now one of America's most visited national parks.
Alcatraz Island, best known as the infamous federal penitentiary from 1934 - 63, unfolds a layered history as Native American land, a Civil War - era military fortress, and the site of the Native American occupation by the Indians of All Tribes from 1969 - 71.
Its strange name (its meaning still debated) is appropriate, given The Rock's unique history as a federal penitentiary, but as our guide noted, some of the island's truly unique artifacts are its gardens and the stories behind them.
For this exhibition, internationally renowned Chinese artist Ai Weiwei created a new body of work specifically for Alcatraz, responding to the island's layered legacy as a 19th - century military fortress, a notorious federal penitentiary, a site of Native American heritage and protest, and now one of America's most visited national parks.
Above all, Warhol's art revolved around iconography made famous through TV, newsfilm - clips and advertising, such as atomic bomb mushroom clouds, penitentiary electric chairs, car crashes and race riots.
The first display by Paul Noble will be inspired by the history of the Tate Britain site as a penitentiary;
Neatly limned ink drawings from 1981 declare the concepts on which his retro - Modernist, grid - based paintings have been based: they are schematic renderings of prison cells that represent modern systems of dwelling, technology and communication as a vast, interconnected penitentiary of consciousness.
As new mandatory minimum legislation increasingly applies, these prisoners will be migrating to a Federal penitentiary system ill - equipped to handle the influx.
Writing for five members of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, Mr. Justice David Doherty concluded his pure and unassailable legal analysis by finding that «the cavernous disconnect between the severity of the offence as described in my reasonable hypothetical and a three - year penitentiary sentence is determinative of the s. 12 analysis.
For those who might succumb to a vagrant thought as to how Bernardo, ensconced in penitentiary having been convicted of heinous crimes, has the temerity, and, is permitted, to assert rights both in this court and in the court below, it is to be remembered that the issue here is the quality of those rights rather than the quality of the litigant.
As noted in a recent case at the British Columbia Court of Appeal, the offender, a long - time drug addict, began his addiction to illicit drugs during his first term of imprisonment at a federal penitentiary.
The word contraband is also broadly defined in s. 2 (1)(a) and (e) of the CCRA as an «intoxicant» and, ``... any item... that could jeopardize the security of a penitentiary or the safety of persons, when that item is possessed without prior authorization.»
The majority of his work is focused on representing people charged with Indictable offences who are facing significant penitentiary sentences as a result of their charges.
If an offender is sent to jail for two years or more, they will go to a federal penitentiary, such as the Kingston Penitentiary.
On 7 August 1878, a man named Oo - pie - too - kah - han - up - ee - weyin, also referred to in the court file as «The Pondmaker» swore an Information accusing another man of stealing his horse.1 «The Pondmaker» of this court case was surely the man now known to us as Poundmaker (Pihtokahanapiwiyin), headman of the River People, spokesperson at Treaty 6 negotiations, one of the most prominent First Nations leaders of his generation, and one of the chiefs convicted of treason - felony in 1885 and sentenced to three years in the penitentiary.2
The only locations exempt from possible designation as a «public work», would be those clearly under federal jurisdiction, pursuant to s. 91 of the Constitution Act, 1867, (U.K.), 30 & 31 Victoria, c. 3, such as penitentiaries, banks, beacons, buoys, lighthouses, and «such Classes of Subjects as are expressly excepted in the Enumeration of the Classes of Subjects by this Act assigned exclusively to the Legislatures of the Provinces.»»
To work as Correctional Officer in a state penitentiary, rehabilitation or correctional facility
To take on a position as a Correctional Officer in a large penitentiary or reformation facility
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z