(After seeing them en masse, I wonder if they had been staged to induce cooperation from other prisoners.)
"Collect evidence, build cases, arrange plea bargains and witness support where necessary, observe and induce cooperation, that sort of thing."
Federal prosecutors say they are better equipped to handle such matters, in part because Federal penalties are stiffer and more likely to induce cooperation.
They also agreed that financial and other incentives, like lenient treatment, should be offered to induce cooperation from wary Iraqi scientists and military officers.
And the company is using the Internet to induce better cooperation among its 8,500 researchers and scientists, who spend about $1.8 billion a year on research and development.
Serconal would have induced cooperation, or at least they must have thought so.
He worked to figure the most failsafe way in which he could turn this new-found power of inducing cooperation into profit and comfort.
Burke defined the rhetorical function of language as "a symbolic means of inducing cooperation in beings that by nature respond to symbols."
This was a highly technical, novel interpretation of laws long used by Congress and executive agencies to induce truthful cooperation.
He described rhetoric as "the use of language as a symbolic means of inducing cooperation in beings that by nature respond to symbols."