Japan does not have an equivalent of Brady disclosure rules as in the US, which would have made failure to disclose salient evidence to the defense censurable as prosecutorial misconduct.
12.
While he criticized Virgil Earp s decision to call upon his brother Wyatt and Doc Holliday as an injudicious and censurable act, he nonetheless could attach no criminality to ( Virgil s ) unwise act.
13.
Wheelwright then spoke in the afternoon, and while in the eyes of a lay person his sermon may have appeared benign and non-threatening, to the Puritan clergy it was " censurable and incited mischief ".
14.
Thirdly, does the use of the word threats by an administrator acting on behalf of Wikipedia not imply that I have demonstrably behaved in a censurable fashion, just by using the word rather than proving that I behaved threateningly ( abuse of privilege )?
15.
To the Puritan clergy, his sermon was " censurable and incited mischief . " The colony's ministers were offended by the sermon, but the free grace advocates were encouraged, and they became more vociferous in their opposition to the " legal " ministers.
16.
Aggravated homicide ( art . 132 of the Penal Code ) is considered any wilful and intentional act in which death is provoked under particularly censurable or malicious circumstances, and is punishable with a prison term of no less than 12 and no longer than 25 years.
17.
In his " professional role, a coach is to maintain conduct that is an example, on the level of discipline for the players and for the fans in attendance _ in this light, the behavior of Mazzone is censurable, " the federation concluded.
18.
In January 2009, a censurable allegation against Rennie, that his'lifestyle'constituted a great'public scandal'( or " Fama Clamosa " in Church of Scotland law ), was lodged with the Presbytery of Angus ( in which Brechin Cathedral resides ).
19.
While in the eyes of a lay person Wheelwright's sermon may have appeared benign and non-threatening, to the Puritan clergy it was " censurable and incited mischief . " Cotton considered this sermon to be " ill-advised in manner, although . . . valid enough in content ."
20.
Meanwhile, Webern's characteristically passionate pan-German nationalism and censurable, sordid political sympathies ( however naive or delusional and whether ever dispelled or faltered ) were not widely known or went unmentioned; perhaps in some part due to his personal and political associations before the German Reich, his degradation and mistreatment under it, and his fate immediately after the war.