Documents on Fundamental Human Rights: The Anglo-American Tradition. Compiled, Edited and with a Pref. How Human Rights Got Into the Constitution, Volume 2Atheneum, 1952 - Civil rights |
From inside the book
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Page 59
... prisoner or prisoners ac- cording to the command of the said writ , within the re- spective time aforesaid , or upon demand made by the prisoner or person in his behalf , shall refuse to deliver , to the person so demanding , a true ...
... prisoner or prisoners ac- cording to the command of the said writ , within the re- spective time aforesaid , or upon demand made by the prisoner or person in his behalf , shall refuse to deliver , to the person so demanding , a true ...
Page 102
... prisoner , on his taking an oath of allegiance and future abstention from in any way encouraging or giving aid and comfort to the rebellion or its supporters . The judge could also require the prisoner to give bond for his future good ...
... prisoner , on his taking an oath of allegiance and future abstention from in any way encouraging or giving aid and comfort to the rebellion or its supporters . The judge could also require the prisoner to give bond for his future good ...
Page 224
... prisoner come into court , the judge can hold the hearing in the prisoner's cell . If the mountain will not come to Mohammed , then Mohammed can go to the mountain . Second , the judge can impound the record until it can safely be laid ...
... prisoner come into court , the judge can hold the hearing in the prisoner's cell . If the mountain will not come to Mohammed , then Mohammed can go to the mountain . Second , the judge can impound the record until it can safely be laid ...
Common terms and phrases
accused aforesaid Amendment arrest Article Attorney authority bail Bill cause charged Chief Justice citizen civil courts command committed Committee Commons confessions Constitution convicted counsel crime criminal custody danger declared defendant detained discharge District Document enemy enforcement evidence Ex parte Milligan Executive fact Federal grand jury guilty habeas corpus Haxey Hearings House imprisonment investigation issue jail judge judgment judicial jurisdiction King King's law of war legislative liberty Lord magistrate Majesty martial law matter McNabb ment military commission military tribunals Milligan Mitsuye Endo offenses officers opinion Parliament Peter Wentworth petition Petition of Right petitioners police President prisoner privilege proceedings prompt production public safety punishment question reason Relocation Centers Reports S. R. Gardiner sabotage Sixth Amendments Speech statute Supreme Court Thomas Darnel time-limit tion trial United United States Reports unto verdict violation War Relocation Authority warrant Wilkes writ of habeas