Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
So unless you have some reasonable suspicion of a crime taking place, you have no right to harass me."
There were no obvious injuries and there was no suspicion of a crime, Scotland Yard said.
"Suspicion of a crime?
The standard cited in the article - reasonable suspicion of a crime - is enough to justify a stop, but not enough to make a legal frisk.
The report makes clear that Internet traffic may only be monitored where there is suspicion of a crime and as part of a legal process following a court ruling.
More than half of Moroccan-Dutch youths aged 18 to 24 years in Rotterdam have been in trouble with the police for the suspicion of a crime.
"Atticus" is a version of the detective story in which there is no particular suspicion of a crime, but in which something naggingly like "evidence" nevertheless keeps turning up.
Article 5 provides the right to liberty and security, subject only to lawful arrest or detention under certain other circumstances, such as arrest on suspicion of a crime or imprisonment in fulfilment of a sentence.
The Michigan Attorney General has released an opinion stating that open carry is NOT considered reasonable suspicion of a crime, but there are no Michigan court decisions definitively ruling on this point.
"There had been no suspicion of a crime and therefore there hadn't been the need to authorise a forced entry of the property," said Maj. Giuliano Gerbo, of the local Carabinieri.
This case set the standard that determines the limits of legal police surveillance of political activity in California; police cannot engage in such surveillance in the absence of reasonable suspicion of a crime ("Lockyer Manual").
The BaFin has the right, when it discovers a crime or even the suspicion of a crime, in particular insider trading, market manipulation, illegal operation of banking, financial fraud, incitement to establish stock exchange speculation to forward them to law enforcement authorities.
Twenty-five years ago, the Supreme Court validated a practice known as "search incident to arrest," which is an exception to the ordinary Fourth Amendment requirement that a search be supported by probable cause, or at least some level of suspicion of a crime.
Under new criminal justice laws that took effect this month, the police were also given the right to take hair roots, mouth swabs or other "non-intimate" samples for DNA testing from anyone they arrest on suspicion of a crime that carries a potential jail sentence, even if the suspect objects.
Under a federally mediated agreement to prevent racial profiling by the police, officers in St. Paul will inform drivers who have been pulled over that they can refuse to let their cars be searched, though officers will not need permission if they have a strong suspicion of a crime.
Suspicion of a crime is an example of where the employer need only prove it believed guilt as opposed to the employee being found guilty, although an investigation is still needed, even if the crime is against the discplinary code, but not until before termination - it can be after notice of dismissal.