Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
"But how could the Central Council allow such a perversion of justice?"
What perversion of justice was at work here?
However, the perversion of justice is also a dominant theme throughout the play, despite Henry's inability to see it.
A horrible perversion of justice was taking place!
This is a total perversion of justice.
They are unlawful, unconstitutional, and a perversion of justice."
It would be unseemly of me to even hint at such a grotesque perversion of justice."
"It's an absolute perversion of justice."
Sickening perversion of justice.
They taught: "The sword comes to the world because of delay of justice and through perversion of justice."
The group points to numerous cases in which it says the warrants, which were designed as a fast-track method, have led to the perversion of justice.
If not, if you still think there's been a deliberate perversion of justice, well, then you have to decide what you want to do about it.
The sentence against Teske was overturned in 1993, and two of the jurists involved were sentenced for perversion of justice in 1998.
A bald-faced perversion of justice, this newly emerging practice was enacted upon individuals who committed petty crimes, or no crimes at all.
Much of this systemic perversion of justice took place decades ago, but the Ashcroft-Mueller crowd is determined to keep the embarrassing institutional history hushed up.
Perversions of Justice: Indigenous Peoples and Angloamerican Law.
July 3, 2007 "President Bush's decision to commute the sentence of Lewis Libby is a perversion of justice.
Dirk Schleyer, Hanns-Martin Schleyer's son, said the court's decision "was a perversion of justice."
Such a course of action is simply an incredible perversion of justice, and the European Union and its Member States must not close their eyes to this.
These charges are exceptionally serious and mean either that the police were guilty of a perversion of justice or that the witnesses committed mass perjury at the inquest.
In Perversions of Justice (2002), Churchill argues that the U.S.'s legal system was adapted to gain control over Native American people.
There were gasps in the packed courtroom, and the district attorney who had prosecuted the case, Carl A. Vergari, called Judge Martin's decision "a grave perversion of justice."
It would be an obscene perversion of justice to award a convicted murderer rent payments from the woman who was forced to raise their children alone under a cloud of disgrace."
No Contest: Corporate Lawyers and the Perversion of Justice in America, by Ralph Nader and Wesley J. Smith.