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  1. ACCUSATION - A formal charge against a person, to the effect that he has engaged in a punishable offense. ACCUSED - The generic name for the defendant in a criminal case. ACKNOWLEDGMENT - 1.

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  2. Reasonable efforts were made to define the words and phrases in this handbook in general terms. However, if the reader desires a precise definition of a term pertaining to a criminal matter or civil action, then please refer to the applicable statute(s) or rule(s). Copyright © 2020, Mississippi Judicial College,

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  3. The following glossary is intended as a brief introduction to the terms and phrases provided and should not be considered a definitive source for defining the terms. The descriptions are intended to be more practice oriented than technical. For a more thorough definition of terms, refer to a legal dictionary, such as Black’s or Barron’s. aka

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  4. A REFUTATION — of spurious allegations by Professors Mair & Didier In the monograph In and Outside the Square (3 vols., Sino-Platonic Papers 192: 2009), author John Didier makes statements which have, and will be, interpreted as alleging impropriety on my part, based on the fact that ideas appearing in previous publications of my own, specifically Pankenier 2004b, and Pankenier, 2009c (see ...

  5. Jury: A verdict of a judge or jury that a person accused of committing a crime did commit it. [Top] A court order used to bring a defendant physically before a court in order to ensure the person’s detention or imprisonment is not illegal.

  6. Abuse is presumed if the debtor's aggregate current monthly income (see definition above) over 5 years, net of certain statutorily allowed expenses is more than (i) $10,000, or (ii) 25% of the debtor's nonpriority unsecured debt, as long as that amount is at least $6,000.

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  8. Dec 31, 2009 · Glossary of Supreme Court terms. Amicus curiae brief: “Friend of the court” brief; a brief filed by a person, group or entity that is not a party to the case but nonetheless wishes to provide the court with its perspective on the issue before it. The person or entity is called an “amicus”; the plural is “amici.”.

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