Sentences with phrase «without police permit»

Indeed, many of the important constitutional cases of the modern era, which, inter alia, protected the independence of the judiciary and the right of the citizen to demonstrate without police permit, were undertaken by him.

Not exact matches

It's being reported that the owner of the factory ignored orders by police to shut down the building after they deemed it unsafe, and that the top four floors were built illegally without any permits.
In the course of the planning, the customers told the paper that they applied for police permit to enable demonstrate without breaking the laws.
The former Liberal Democrat leader was selected to head the eight - person committee, which will seek to ascertain why Metropolitan police officers were permitted to search Mr Green's parliamentary office without a warrant.
While the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey has jurisdiction over the airport, its police are not permitted to enter the Customs and Border Protection area without the invitation of federal authorities.
The government called the permit regulation an appropriate means to combat illegal trading in eagle feathers, without turning federal agents into «religious police» forced to verify the indigenous genealogy of people who possess the feathers.
Of the puppy dealers who received citations from the Tulsa Police Department for selling pups on the streets of Tulsa without a vendor's permit, two thirds of those offenders were not from Tulsa.
The motion, which is being pushed by Brighton and Hove's Mike Weatherley and about 20 other MPs, would permit police to enter the premises and arrest squatters who are occupying a property without the consent of its owner.
... Ian Thomas Baldwin, who holds a PhD from Cornell, and now serves as researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology in Jena... [had] been accused of «title abuse» by the German police under a little - known Nazi - era law that specifies that only people who hold PhDs or medical degrees from German universities are permitted to be called «Dr.» [But] persons with a PhD from an accredited US institution can now use Dr. in Germany without jeopardy.
The trade ‑ off for permitting the police to deploy their dogs on a «reasonable suspicion» standard without a warrant is that if this procedure is abused and sniffer ‑ dog searches proceed without reasonable suspicion based on objective facts, the consequence could well tip the balance against the admission of the evidence if it is established under s. 24 (2) of the Charter that, having regard to all the circumstances, the admission of it in the proceedings would bring the administration of justice into disrepute.
In some respects this power is similar to section 7 (3)(c. 1) of the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA), legislation which applies to private organizations in the federal sphere, which permits the disclosure of personal information collected by an organization without an individual's consent if a «government institution» (which presumably includes police) requests that the information be disclosed.
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