In this parlor, too, parents and friends may be allowed by the authorities to meet the prisoners, whether on remand or awaiting their sentence.
At the end of the sitting he told me that he was obliged to remand me, and that during my remand I must not leave Paris or get married, as all my civil rights were in suspense pending the decision.
On the Wednesday following his arrest, he was arraigned before Police Magistrate Peebles, but upon the production of the dispatches from the Chicago authorities, a remand was granted for two days, without any evidence being offered.
When they had told what they knew, a remand was granted for a week.
Crooks headed a deputation from the Asylums Board to the London magistrates at Bow Street to urge them in future to commit all remand children to the Homes.
So two or three dwelling-houses were taken in different quarters of London and adapted as Remand Homes.
On the Asylums Board they are known as remand children.
They are not always so frank as you find them in the Remand Homes.
A visit to this Remand Home at Pentonville will teach you disquieting truths about the vagrant child-life of London.
The first of the Remand Homes was opened at Pentonville Road for the convenience of children charged at the police courts of North London and the East-End.
The magistrates were sympathetic enough, but showed it was their duty to carry out the law, and that the law clearly laid it down that youthful offenders under remand must be sent to the workhouse.
Justices and magistrates, an entirely ignorant class as a rule, often remandchildren for a week, and then perhaps remit whatever sentence they are entitled to pass.
To a little child, whether he is in prison on remand or after conviction is not a subtlety of position he can comprehend.
They will not listen then; they will remand us to the ballot-box.
It is because of this fact that I ask you not to remand us back to the States, but to submit to the States the proposition of a sixteenth amendment.
He published all that you have told me and if he should secure a judgment it is known that he canremand you to jail for six months.
Then he could remand you to jail for six months by paying your keep.
So there would be nothing left for you but to remand him to jail, which seems to be your desire.
They don't know that if he secures a judgment, he can remand the Elder to jail for six months.
It was necessary to remand it to its place, which naturally could not be done without provoking great indignation among the masses.
AN eventful day was now approaching, and on the morrow I was to appear at Bow Street for the first time after my formal remand of the previous Friday.
The food supply as at present arranged is a cruel system; a prisoner under remand is gratified at hearing that he may procure his own food, and naturally shrinks at the idea of subsisting on prison fare till absolutely compelled.
As it was, nothing was likely to arise which would titillate the public until Barthorpe Herapath, now safely lodged in the remand prison, was brought to trial, or unless Burchill was arrested.
The cheque was not in court; and so many other essential ingredients of the case were only conspicuous by their absence, that Mr. Snayke should merely ask the bench to remand the prisoner.
He would have acquiesced in a remand for seven or ten times seventy months.
The offender was brought before the magistrate, in the usual course, and remand upon remand was applied for and obtained.
He, however, remarked that the case was one of very grave suspicion, and that he should remand her for a week, in order that inquiries might be made, with a view to getting further evidence upon the case.
What I want is to have the appeal dismissed, of course, but if the attorney general does not see fit to do so, he can, at least, remand back the case for a new trial.
If the attorney general sustains the appeal, I suppose he will remand the case for a new trial, but I have reasons to suppose he will dismiss the appeal and affirm the decision of the District Court in my favor.
February 28th, the General gave us each a legal form, granting us liberty on parole for one year, at the expiration of which period it was in his power to remand us to prison, if he did not incline to grant us our freedom.
Such cruel treatment did not affect only political prisoners but even people on remand, and it was nothing extraordinary for them to be imprisoned for years on remand only.
On hearing that a prisoner was Czech and on remand for Par.
If a prisoner went to this 'gentleman,' he did not ask after his illness, but after his nationality, and for the reason of his remand imprisonment.
We must remand him, and make inquiries at the market town.
The bench will remand you for the present, and will at any rate commit you for trial for the robbery.
It was too late to do anything; so they allowed a remand for another week, and Sam was walked off to prison.
Another remand was asked for a week, with an understanding that at the end of the week it should be renewed if necessary.
The Grinder had not been taken, and a further remand was necessary.
The remand now stood again till Tuesday, June the 5th, and it was understood that if Brattle did not then appear the bail would be declared to have been forfeited.
To remand them would do very little good; for a new set of writs would bring them all back again.
Further formal evidence was given, and a remand asked for.
He had only a few minutes ago finished reading the report of Laverick's examination before the magistrates and his remand until the morrow, upon the charge of murder.