But though Einhard declared he would record nothing through hearsay, he also glossed over facts unfavourable to his hero. |
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So, an unlabelled film you haven't seen yet with no more provenance than hearsay contains conclusive proof? |
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These are not concrete facts, but hearsay from my brother, who maintains a friendship with them both. |
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They have accepted hearsay, endorsed scurrilous attacks, and walked away from their responsibilities as pastoral shepherds and teachers. |
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Meanwhile they continue to publish more third-hand hearsay from the British insurance industry. |
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Traditionally hearsay evidence was inadmissible, subject to certain defined exceptions. |
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It is extremely likely that these witnesses would either lie or be giving inadmissible hearsay evidence. |
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Instead witnesses are allowed to give hearsay evidence of an identification that takes place outside the court. |
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There again, who am I to make sweeping generalisations about the movie based merely on hearsay and gossip? |
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As in the first instance above, I find this hearsay evidence to be necessary as the declarant is now deceased. |
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In relation to the other concerns raised by the woman, he pointed these were very subjective matters and hearsay. |
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The following statements are admitted under the principled approach to hearsay. |
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All of this proceeds on the basis that hearsay evidence is probative and, therefore, relevant. |
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These powers include the ability to convict suspects by innuendo, hearsay and rumour. |
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Anonymous testimony and intelligence based on hearsay are often inadmissible in civilian courts. |
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There would be more stories to tell, stories I learned from hearsay, but I haven't talked in person to the people concerned. |
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The irony has often been that charges were based on hearsay and rumour rather than on proper research and verification. |
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I'd better make it clear here that this is all gossip and hearsay, and I'm certainly not going to name my sources. |
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This being a small town, the community is awash with rumour, secrets and hearsay, often tinged with a touch of mysticism. |
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All we have is hearsay provided by the author, and hearsay doesn't make for a balanced and accurate story. |
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In R v. Abbey, the Court held that an expert opinion based on inadmissible hearsay evidence is admissible, provided it is relevant. |
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Prime facie thus it would appear that the police officer's evidence was hearsay. |
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The probe had to look into a plethora of truths, half-truths, hearsay, gossip and rumours, the minister said. |
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The following are facts, not hearsay or supposition, and they are backed up with records going back 25 years. |
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Unlike traditional courts, second-hand evidence and hearsay can be admitted as evidence. |
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It is the equivalent of late-night pub gossip, with nothing more than second-hand hearsay evidence to back it up. |
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All quotes, except those cited by link, consist entirely of hearsay, malefactions, and poorly-conjured misrepresentations. |
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It is not a function of a committing magistrate to apply hearsay argument and exclude evidence. |
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He used a combination of intimidation and hearsay evidence to browbeat the accused. |
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I did know, by hearsay, that she was on familiar terms with the exile court. |
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Police say they wanted to clarify initial accounts which were based on hearsay, hurried details from dispatchers. |
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The government has never admitted the key information was based on hearsay. |
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The evidence that supports this theory is hearsay anecdotes going back thousands of years. |
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Frankly, what the hapless visitors to the gallery are now being presented with is a farrago of contextless quotes, statements of belief and reports of misleading hearsay. |
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Courts have also forcefully criticized notes prepared by someone based on hearsay or information provided by another person. |
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The complainant claimed that this decision was based on hearsay and without any formal inquiry into his removal. |
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All this information is based on hearsay, circumstantial evidence and anonymous interviews. |
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The employer therefore has to avoid information based on hearsay or mere impressions. |
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This list comprises people with whom we have worked and is not simply based on hearsay or unsubstantiated claims of language skills. |
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All comments should be based on facts and personal knowled ge rather than on hearsay. |
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Well, if you say that there has been a contravention of the hearsay rule, you have to demonstrate the purpose for which the courts used the evidence. |
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It is conceded by the defence that whatever was said by the deceased in the presence of the accused does not fall within the hearsay exclusionary rule. |
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The testimony continued and the director stated he received further hearsay information from an investigator that the consentee was of Chinese descent and could not speak or read the English language. |
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While that is hearsay evidence and not admissible to prove that the accident did occur at that time, it is admissible evidence relevant to the state of mind of the declarant. |
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It is based on innuendo, rumour, hearsay, and it is founded on a patronizing attitude toward women in our society today. |
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But the majority on the appeals panel dismissed that conclusion as based on hearsay. |
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It then emerged that Mr Botha's claim about the Italian house was based on hearsay. |
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If the prosecution wants to use hearsay evidence, it has to give notice to the defense and a hearing has to be held to see if it's reliable. |
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This method leaves no room for taking things for granted or for jumping to conclusions on the basis of hearsay. |
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While hearsay has become admissible in court, free speech is being patrolled by officious use of public order laws. |
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When the truth begins to emerge it becomes apparent that the rumours of affairs were hearsay, but a darker secret of family ties lies beneath them. |
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And yes, because often these thugs terrorise those who challenge them, we allow the police to give the evidence as hearsay. |
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And that hearsay may very well end with a person's imprisonment for an action which is not classed as an offence under British law. |
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Although hearsay evidence is generally not admissible, there is a legal exception for records of this type. |
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I accept the evidence-in-chief of Mr. Hollis as truthful and reliable, even though it is to some extent hearsay evidence. |
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It is an action that is based on false pretences, hearsay and is politically motivated and unjustified. |
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Now that's hearsay, but it clearly indicates you've got to go a long way back to find this early a start. |
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Most of his observations appear to be based on first hand knowledge, although some of his statements are obviously derived from hearsay. |
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The appeal primarily concerned the admissibility of expert testimony deriving from hearsay. |
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The investigator should be alert for hearsay evidence, or accounts of what the witness has heard other people saying. |
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This means that wild fabrications, groundless hearsay and wellauthenticated facts exist in the same domain. |
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The difficulty with expert opinion evidence is that sometimes the expert relies on the work or word of other individuals and therefore may infringe the rule against hearsay. |
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Such statements are often admissible under exceptions to the law that otherwise forbids the use of hearsay at trial. |
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I wholly accept that the doctrine admits the hearsay statements, not only where the declarant is dead or otherwise not available but when he is called as a witness. |
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He does, however, attempt to dispel some of the myths that have emerged from hearsay and rumor over the last century. |
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Each of these incidents incited the miffed woman to disseminate mild hearsay about my sexual orientation or general oddness. |
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The FBI, relying heavily on hearsay and reportage from the American press and even international presses, provided an extensive profile of Baker as a political threat. |
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A major aspect of the application is whether the averments in the statements of case are true, an issue on which hearsay evidence is admissible in the action itself. |
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The only thing notorious about it is how much hearsay about self-indulgence and narcissism has swirled around the film without people having seen it. |
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Perhaps the FBI deleted these portions of the records simply because they contained slurs and daggers that were hearsay and undocumented, unvalidated rumors. |
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Anything that happens after Wednesday is simply hearsay and rumours. |
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I must highlight that this could be bad information and hearsay. |
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It was built as two houses for two brothers, according to hearsay. |
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At a time the media should show responsibility in its reportage of a crisis, several foreign correspondents have been relying on hearsay and rumour. |
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It was quite striking that the one person in the article who had something negative to say was basing his opinion on hearsay rather than on facts. |
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It's very hard to get a handle on what actually happened and so of course our information is hearsay and we can only have a certain amount of faith in it. |
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This evidence was strictly hearsay and as such was inadmissible. |
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Whether evidence is hearsay depends on what you are using it for. |
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Nor had they put the witness statement in as hearsay evidence. |
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I quickly grasped, however, that if not the factotum of the city, he was very well connected in a certain subculture whose existence I was just, by hearsay, becoming aware of. |
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The Ratification Committee shall determine such applications on the best evidence that is available to it which may include unsworn written statements and hearsay evidence. |
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A large number of these funds, which are purely speculative, play on hearsay to create imbalances and give rise to the volatility required to make a profit without economic cause. |
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Moreover, the witnesses either gave accounts based on hearsay from local residents whose names they did not know, or denied the allegations altogether. |
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We didn't base it on hearsay, hypothesis, or second-hand information. |
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The allegations that he presents are based on hearsay. |
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Some folk don't know when to haud their wheesht, to stay silent and neither spread gossip nor comment on things that could turn into hearsay. |
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Most French soldiers that knew about the defeats, and were now joining the line, only knew of German success by hearsay. |
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The only evidence against the five men consisted of two almost identical witness testimonies, which appear to have been rehearsed, and a statement based on hearsay. |
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Our report is based on hearsay and circumstantial evidence, but it makes judgments and even passes sentence with the burden on the accused of proving his innocence. |
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Many appear highly speculative or based on hearsay. |
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Verify information based on hearsay with more than one source. |
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The witness knitted together his testimony from contradictory pieces of hearsay. |
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This opportunity has always been denied, and it was finally admitted by the government that no sworn testimony existed, and that the information was based on hearsay. |
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If it is accepted, the fact that it is hearsay merely goes to its weight. |
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Although functional foods may indeed play such important roles, it is crucial that their manufacturers are not allowed to make claims based on hearsay rather than fact. |
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Evidence of conversations with customers who are prepared to discuss such things, bearing in mind that their interests are not coincident with those of the domestic producers, would be hearsay. |
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Although the testimony of Mr. Khanna is clearly hearsay, his evidence was not contradicted by the testimony of Mr. Fournier, someone who was never personally involved in the chain of communication between the parties. |
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As with any product, anecdotal hearsay can sway public opinion. |
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Further, the psychiatric assessment on which the Court based its finding was carried out two years before the trial and included hearsay information which was not evaluated in court. |
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My understanding is from what I have been told, it is hearsay though, that in fact some film does exist in the public domain, clear evidence of further examples of torture. |
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Lucie Bisson steps right out of a fantasy realm and unpacks a suitcase full of devils, werewolves, black magic, priests, hearsay and things better left unsaid! |
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He must engage, yet shuns the quick surmise With passion for those cool exactitudes He isolates from hearsay, myths, and lies, Tactful and tentative as he intrudes. |
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Swinton did so, knowing Churchill would remain a critic of the government, but believing that an informed critic was better than one relying on rumour and hearsay. |
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Subsequent to the referendum, there had been hearsay that the referendum was narrowly won by the responsible government side, but the result was fixed by the British governor. |
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Their steepness and abruptness were even greater than I had imagined from hearsay, and suggested nothing in common with the prosaic objective world we know. |
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However, at both common law and under evidence codifications such as the Federal Rules of Evidence, there are dozens of exemptions from and exceptions to the hearsay rule. |
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The Federal Rules of Evidence settled on one of these four definitions and then fixed the various exceptions and exemptions in relation to the preferred definition of hearsay. |
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Little evidence substantiates such stories other than hearsay collected after his death, and Shakeshafte was a common name in the Lancashire area. |
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They're supposedly getting married soon, but that's just hearsay. |
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Hearsay doesn't count and unauthenticated photographs don't count. |
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Hearsay standards are similarly relaxed, as are the standards for authenticating written documents. |
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Hearsay is an out of court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted. |
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Hearsay evidentiality has become grammaticalised in the Estonian language, occurring in the indirectal category. |
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