l
la
lb
lc
ld
le
lf
lg
lh
li
ll
lm
lo
lp
lr
ls
lt
lu
lv
lw
lx
ly
lz
Перевод: larceny
[существительное] кража ; воровство [существительное]
Тезаурус:
- A much more specific fear was that young people would be provoked into imitative crime by the daring exploits witnessed on the screen, and the National Council of Public Morals addressed itself with particular vigour to the belief "that the picture house is responsible for the increase in juvenile crime, and that boys are often led to imitate crimes (larceny or burglary) which they have seen in the pictures, or to steal money that they may pay for admission,.
- "In which time Inspector Cotton, and his minion Sergeant Mack, have bestirred themselves sufficiently to write the case off as a killing during petty larceny!
- What I normally do is vandalism, poaching, driving without insurance, petty opportunist larceny.
- And remember, legal experts could argue endlessly and at great expense about ownership and what constitutes "Larceny".
- Now "stealing by trick", you've got all the powers that go under the Larceny Act.
- Prior to the passage of the Theft Act 1968, which made radical changes in and greatly simplified the law relating to theft and some other offences, it was necessary to prove that the property alleged to have been stolen was taken "without the consent of the owner" (Larceny Act 1916, section 1(1)).
- In Cavendish the defendant was charged with receiving stolen goods contrary to section 33 of the Larceny Act 1916 so it was essential to prove that he was in possession of the goods.
- Although authors have arrived at different figures, thus reflecting the inherent difficulty and speculative nature of the task involved, they have been unanimous in one conclusion: persons are deprived of far more money by corporate crimes than they are by ordinary economic crimes, such as robbery, theft, larceny, and auto-theft.
- In an interview with the New York Times, McDevitt (who had three more larceny convictions in the 1980s) denied even knowing about the Gardner theft, but he revealed a familiarity with techniques of cutting paintings from frames.
- A former IBM Corp employee has been arraigned on seven counts of grand larceny for allegedly stealing more than 49m worth of mainframe memory boards from the company - but you're meant to laugh at the 49m figure, because that is the highest price at which they were included in the price list, and very few customers are likely ever to have paid it; the indictment by an Ulster County grand jury charged Carl McDonald, 41, of Poughkeepsie conspired to steal 3,381 mainframe memory boards from IBM's complex in Kingston, and allegedly sold the boards for 7m, a more realistic valuation, to computer firms in Texas, Minnesota, California, Canada and here in the UK; no names.
- He argued that the old distinction between the offence of false pretences and larceny had been preserved.
- Under the old law they could not have been found guilty of larceny, because the seller agreed to transfer the property in the goods to Ballay, and the fact that the seller's agreement was obtained by a fraud does not affect that conclusion.
- "In addition to the division of misappropriation into three main offences the distinction between larceny and obtaining by false pretences contrary to the Larceny Act 1916, section 32 is sometimes very subtle.
|
|
LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов
|
|