Sentences with phrase «undercover police officers on»

The defendants — who range in age from 18 to 56 — were targeted during pre-dawn raids early today and are charged with selling powdered and crack cocaine, heroin and highly addictive prescription pharmaceuticals to undercover police officers on dozens of occasions since last November.

Not exact matches

We're introduced to Dom and his little sister, Mia (Jordana Brewster), who run a beat - up lunch counter when they're not drag racing through the streets of L.A. Undercover police officer Brian (Paul Walker), sent to investigate a string of truck robberies that Dom may or may not be involved in, is immediately distracted by Mia, who serves him tuna sandwiches on white bread with the crusts cut off.
However, on Tuesday, France's highest court for judicial matters, the Court of Cassation, ruled an undercover police officer's actions in the case had been unlawful, and ordered the Paris Court of Appeal to look again at the investigation's validity.
Police Commander John Keating said Hong Yang, 57, of Chicago, was charged with one count of prostitution after she offered to perform oral sex on an undercover officer for $ 120 at Q - Spa in Orland Park.
According to the District Attorney's Office, Heriberto Rivera - Marti Jr., 22, on separate dates between Feb. 9 and March 6, 2017, sold a mixture of heroin, fentanyl and cocaine to an undercover police officer in a parking lot on Buffalo's lower West Side.
Costello is the movie's gruesome soul, but its primary focus is on his two relationships, one with Sullivan and the other with Leonardo DiCaprio's Billy Costigan, a former state police officer sent undercover into Costello's destructive, powerful crime ring.
The movie, produced by Get Out director Jordan Peele, is about the real - life story of Ron Stallworth, the black police officer who went undercover in 1978 to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan — speaking on the phone to Klansmen and sending white officers in his place when face - to - face meetings were required.
The film is based on the true story of an African - American police officer who went undercover to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan.
From director Spike Lee comes the provocative story based on Ron Stallworth's real life as Colorado Springs's first African - American police officer who went undercover to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan.
Starring John David Washington and Adam Driver, the film is based on the true story of Stallworth — a black police officer who went undercover and successfully infiltrated a Ku Klux Klan chapter.
As legendary police officer Chase McCain — an expert in disguises who's also a skilled free - runner — you'll go undercover on the trail of escaped criminal Rex Fury.
Bindmans scooped two awards — Charlotte Haworth Hird won the Inquests / Actions Against State award for her work on a judicial review which led to an inquiry into deaths of 18 - 24 year olds in custody; Mike Schwarz won Criminal Defence Lawyer for his work exposing misconduct by undercover police officers.
In addition, the two members are scheduled to appear in court on February 21, 2011, on trafficking charges for allegedly selling pot to undercover police officers posing as members of the church in 2006.
The client had messaged a lady who advertised on the Backpages website and unbeknownst to the client the person at the other end was an undercover police officer.
When police, undercover operatives, intelligence officers, military and legal professionals stand together with communities to demand an end to the «war on drugs» you have to ask why.
«[T] he weight of authority suggests that accurate news reporting — even when it is likely to have an adverse impact on the subjects of the report — usually does not give rise to an action for intentional infliction of emotional distress»: Yesterday, a unanimous three - judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit issued a decision affirming a federal district court's dismissal of claims for invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress asserted by two former undercover police officers against a television station in Albuquerque that had revealed their identities and their undercover status in the context of a televised report about their suspected involvement in an alleged incident of sexual assault.
The Crown argued that new developments in the case law support the view that, if the content of a telephone call initiated by an undercover police officer reveals that the person on the other end understands drug jargon and seems prepared to deal in drugs, the reasonable suspicion standard can be met during the call before the opportunity is provided.
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