Detention Determination The judicial officer is not given unbridled discretion in making the detention determination.
A judge has unbridled discretion in matters like these, and there's no way to appeal.
It just gives too much unbridled discretion to prosecutors, and it winds up being arbitrary.
And agencies generally consider rules, even arbitrary ones, a fairer way to ration inadequate resources than unbridled discretion.
Rather, lawmakers were trying to bring some much-needed uniformity, transparency, and accountability to an otherwise 'labyrinthine sentencing and corrections system that 'lacked any principle except unbridled discretion.
In reversing a lower court in that case, the Delaware Supreme Court said "a corporation does not have unbridled discretion to defeat any perceived threat by any Draconian means available."
The Supreme Court today struck down a local ordinance that gave a mayor "unbridled discretion" over which newspaper publishers were allowed to place coin-operated news racks on public property and where to place them.
She had the unbridled discretion, at this moment and under these extreme circumstances, to move it as she saw fit.
"The City, in practice, appears to have unbridled discretion to grant exceptions to the policy," Judge Baer wrote.
Bankruptcy, not bailouts, also vindicates the rule of law, rather than giving government bureaucrats virtually unbridled discretion to seize troubled corporations and pay off some creditors rather than others.