unfit to plead การใช้
- This decision was overturned on review, although Janner was ruled unfit to plead.
- After 30 minutes the seven-member jury found Wu " unfit to plead ".
- Incoherent ` Buddha'found unfit to plead in murder case
- However, on 21 December 2009 he received an absolute discharge because he was deemed unfit to plead.
- Most have either been convicted of serious crimes, or been found unfit to plead in a trial for such crimes.
- If the issue is raised by the prosecution, the prosecution must prove beyond reasonable doubt that the defendant is unfit to plead.
- If a man cannot understand what is going on, he cannot be tried . " The jury formally returned a verdict that Straffen was insane and unfit to plead.
- However, the only witness to be heard was Dr . Peter Parkes, medical officer at Horfield Prison, who testified to Straffen's medical history and stated his conclusion that Straffen was unfit to plead.
- This legislation also allows for the detention and treatment of individuals who have committed crimes but who have either been deemed unfit to plead or have been found not guilty by reason of insanity.
- He was arraigned at Newgate Prison, but after attempting to explain that his " Christ-like powers " had helped him to defeat the voices in his ear, he was declared unfit to plead by reason of insanity.
- By the time Challenor appeared at the Old Bailey in 1964, charged with conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, he was deemed to be unfit to plead and was sent to Netherne mental hospital with a diagnosis of paranoid schizophrenia.
- Please note, I am " specifically " asking about those committed " purely " on the basis of their acute mental illness " not " those charged with a crime, but found " unfit to plead " or " not guilty by reason of insanity " . ( The latter cases would presumably be better recorded and monitored ).
- One of the seven, David Kemiss ( or Kemish ), was found unfit to plead on the grounds of his great age and ill-health, while another, Alexander Lumsden, was acquitted, on the ground that he was a Scot, not an Englishman, and therefore could not be said to have " acted as a priest in England " within the meaning of the statute of 1585.