Sentences with phrase «short sentences because»

You want to use short sentences because they are easy to read and understand.

Not exact matches

Part of the reason is that it can take years to access prison rehabilitation programs if you have a longer sentence because people with shorter sentences get priority; despite recent national efforts to make opioid antidotes and addiction treatments more widely accessible, many prisons still don't have these programs in place, leaving addicts who make it out of prison far more susceptible to relapse.
It's not because He knew we'd be so busy leading that we have to pray in short, quick sentences.
John Fox, 66, who pled guilty in August to defrauding his wine customers at Berkeley's bankrupt Premier Cru of $ 45 million, got a shorter prison sentence because he paid for sex...
He said the courts were giving short prison sentences because there were not enough alternative punishments, and that he wanted to make community sentences tougher.
Such technologies may be made more reliable if they used a person speaking a short sentence rather than a static photo, because speech, with its combination of static features plus dynamics, offers more data, a more complex personal identifier.
It is important to add that confessions can be unreliable because there can be so many pressures on parents to confess, such as the threat that their other children will be taken into care, or the promise of a shorter sentence.
Because I've learned that men can be charming in emails or short written missives, but they are full of expletives or can't put together a full sentence on the phone or in person,» she said.
On the other hand, if you are lucky to get approved by that short sentence on your profile, other single women and men will not contact you because they think you are joking.
Are you able to point to any possible downside (other than the fact that you will be going to prison once millions of middle - class people learn about the role you have played in supporting the biggest act of financial fraud in U.S. history — that's not a good reason because the reality is that your prison sentence will be a lot shorter if you come clean today than it will be if you do not come clean until after the next price crash)?
I also like the commentary because it has me thinking about the possible virtues and potential impact of an O'Connor replacement who has some experience as a sentencing judge (although, interestingly, very few of the «short - list» names bandied about by the press have experience as a federal or state trial judge).
Podgor writes that Madoff received no credit for remorse or pleading guilty, and that his sentence was «grounded in retribution» because Madoff was unlikely ever to exit prison as a free man, even under a shorter sentence.
You don't get a shorter sentence or a better divorce because of technology — in fact you may get a worse deal, due to bias and prejudice.
«There doesn't have to be anything incompatible with what he's doing, with what we're trying to do, because what we do is give people that have been sentenced unfairly, and they feel it, and their lawyers feel it, another bite at the apple, by going before a judge to plead their case, that their sentence ought to be shorter,» Grassley said.
«The paragraph relied upon by the trial judge and the sentence he emphasized hardly signalled a system by which a trial judge could «short circuit» a trial even though there was further evidence to be called, and submissions to be made, simply because he or she thought they had «heard enough,»» Akhtar wrote.
Because hiring managers and recruiters are so short on time, they like to see resumes that are short and sweet, and which get to the point with snappy sentences and brief paragraphs.
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