Sentences with phrase «very real criminals»

Brooks explains that he has hired a company to host a murder - mystery party, but things quickly go off the rails: A pair of very real criminals show up and kidnap Brooks while the group nonchalantly looks on, marveling at how authentic the abduction looks.

Not exact matches

It is clear that it is very hard, nearly impossible, for a Christian today to survive in that demonic system, and one can only hope that Jesus will return soon, and kills those godless leaders (sounds harsh, I know, but they are real criminals making us unhappy in contrast to former leaders who made their people happy holistically).
Hunts across Britain are doing the utmost to abide within what is a very complicated and bureaucratic law, and police forces are wasting time and money policing them when they could be out catching real criminals.
he must think the people of nyc are real idiots who don't care if they elect a criminal whose job it was to enforce the very laws he was breaking.
«That presents a very real difficulty and we considered whether it would be open to the Crown Prosecution Service to advance a different definition of «only or main residence» in any criminal proceedings.
Asked about the current racial breakdown, de Blasio replied, «You are getting fewer stops and better stops, meaning much more of a focus on real criminals, not everyday law - abiding New Yorkers and very effective stops in terms of what outcomes they lead to.»
This has very real utility for both criminal investigations and anthropological research when investigators are faced with an incomplete skeleton.
This membership should include the registration so the other members are validated through their very real identities so you won't have to be worried to find criminals or molesters.
As Bloom and his hapless assistant Rick (Riz Ahmed, from The Reluctant Fundamentalist) barrel down the streets of Los Angeles on the tail of a police cruiser chasing a violent criminal, the adrenaline rush we feel is very real.
I don't want to say more for fear of spoiling it, but it's a very interesting work that borrows heavily from Grant Morrison's favorite theme of the effect of fictional art on «real life» (and vice versa) and Ed Brubaker's «Criminal» storytelling style.
You'd think government would someday learn that making something illegal only serves to open up a huge, very lucrative, black market for the real criminals.
The reasons are obvious enough: the prisoners are kept in unnatural, isolated conditions, their every activity is so strictly regulated and supervised that they have no opportunity to develop a sense of individual responsibility, they are deprived of any real opportunity to learn to live as members of society, their only companions are other criminals, some of whom are bound to be quite vicious, their sex life must be unnatural, psychiatric treatment is very limited, if non ‑ existent, and employment is limited and stereotyped.
During Mr. Byrne's 56 years of practice, he has covered a very broad area of the law including adoption, bankruptcy, real estate, commercial transactions, estate planning and criminal law.
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