Two legal questions arose from the death, firstly whether the taking into custody of Mulrunji was lawful and secondly were the injuries that led to his death illegally caused by the arresting officer.
32.
His successor, Queen Elizabeth to take into custody at Cockfield so that she could recover from her privations, Lady Catherine Grey, sister of Lady Jane Grey and granddaughter of Mary Tudor.
33.
"They are researching, preparing and looking at the administrative procedures that would have to be followed to take into custody a suspected terrorist held by justice, " an administration official said.
34.
These actions were taken in accordance with a directive issued by dominion councillors remaining in Boston, who ordered that frontier militia commanders were to take into custody any Abenaki suspected of participating in the raids.
35.
Following the interior minister s order, cyber crime team of FIA raided Axact s office in Karachi and Islamabad and seized computers, recorded statements of employees as well taking into custody several company employees.
36.
He spoke with particular scorn of Israel's demand that the Palestinian authorities take into custody about 150 suspected Islamic militants and arrest and surrender to Israel about 30 more who are suspected of killing Israelis.
37.
But Israeli security officials said the arrests made by the Palestinian Authority were for show, taking into custody people who, as a senior defense official put it, " are not relevant to the problem ."
38.
The decree could make it easier to take into custody an extremist Islamic cleric, Abu Bakar Bashir, alleged spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, an al-Qaida-linked group accused of plotting terrorism in Southeast Asia.
39.
In Maine, as in many states, there is a protective custody statute, which permits law enforcement officers to take into custody individuals they have reasonable grounds to believe may be an imminent threat to themselves or others.
40.
The police now must take into custody a relative, ex-spouse or person with a child in common who telephones or visits a place he or she was ordered to avoid _ whether or not there was any violence.