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58 Sentences With "making threats to"

How to use making threats to in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "making threats to" and check conjugation/comparative form for "making threats to". Mastering all the usages of "making threats to" from sentence examples published by news publications.

But in an interview with KATC, he implored the those making threats to stop.
They stated he was making threats to harm people if the Cowboys did not sign him.
Law enforcement authorities have already charged one person with making threats to assault and kill Omar.
Several people have been arrested in the weeks since for making threats to schools across the country.
People are protective of Donald Trump, so I guess they're making threats to try to keep it quiet.
The Secret Service questioned him the next day and he was charged with making threats to the then president-elect.
Roger Hedgpeth, 25, was arrested Saturday afternoon on a charge of making threats to do bodily harm, the Metropolitan Police Department said.
President Trump on Tuesday sternly warned North Korea against making threats to the U.S., responding to reports that Pyongyang has expanded its nuclear capabilities.
Instead, Democratic aides say, bipartisan negotiations in the Senate should be allowed to progress without Democrats making threats to Republicans that may aggravate them.
John Joseph Kless, 49, called with messages that were generally vulgar, anti-Islamic and racist, according to the criminal complaint, making threats to California Rep.
Two sheriff's officers in Jacksonville were wounded when they responded to a call about a man making threats to hurt himself and others, officials said.
Palm Bay officers went to the home in the morning after receiving calls reporting a man making threats to three construction workers at a neighboring house.
On the day of the teen's arrest, the Volusia County Sheriff's Office also arrested a 25-year-old man for making threats to commit a mass shooting.
A fired Walmart employee is accused of making threats to blow up a Walmart store in Yakima, Washington, and kill two managers and their families, according to police.
Trump stirred fears about the outlook for the Mexican economy after making threats to tear up the North American Free Trade Agreement and impose tariffs on Mexican-made goods.
Ethan Stables, an unemployed 20-year-old from the northwestern town of Barrow-on-Furness, was found guilty of preparing an act of terrorism, making threats to kill and possessing explosives.
The FBI has arrested 31-year-old Juan Thompson of St. Louis, Missouri for allegedly "cyberstalking a particular woman" by making threats to Jewish centers and the Anti-Defamation League in her name.
Trying to show it was taking every threat seriously, the Essex County Prosecutor's Office held a press conference on February 223 to announce it was charging four individuals for allegedly making threats to schools.
Shepard and American Lindsay Souvannarath, who was 23 when she was charged last year, were accused of conspiracy to commit murder and arson as well making threats to cause harm or death through social media.
On Tuesday, police said a 44-year-old man, who had been arrested on suspicion of making threats to kill after an email was sent to Eagle, had been released on bail pending further enquiries.
A passenger called 911 from the bus to report a male claiming to have a gun and making threats to kill people Friday night as the bus headed to Chicago, the Racine County, Sheriff's Office said.
Tristan Scott Wix A 25-year-old Florida man has been charged with making threats to commit a mass shooting after allegedly sending text messages describing his desire to shoot as many people as he could in a crowd.
An American diplomat involved in an effort by the Trump administration to prevent the introduction of a breast-feeding resolution at a global health conference this spring denied making threats to Ecuador, the country that initially sponsored the resolution.
It doesn't make a ton of sense that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's team would tweet out a video of people making threats to him — or, really, that Twitter would decide that's the moment to crack down on the account.
"By making threats to the lives of Congressman Katko and his family, the defendant potentially faces not only a significant prison sentence but also, as a convicted felon, a loss of his right to vote," U.S. Attorney James P. Kennedy Jr. said in a statement.
But Mr. Cruz appears never to have been institutionalized despite making threats to himself and others, cutting his arms with a pencil sharpener and claiming he had drunk gasoline in a possible attempt to kill himself, all in a five-day period in September 229.
A Yreka police spokesman tells PEOPLE Lara was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, kidnapping, carjacking, assault with a firearm on a person and making threats to terrorize in connection with allegedly shooting the man at the Super 8 and abducting the woman and her grandsons.
Hewitt's perspective comes after Trump on Tuesday sternly warned North Korea against making threats to the U.S. "North Korea best not make any more threats to the United States," Trump said to reporters at his New Jersey golf club after reports that Pyongyang has expanded its nuclear capabilities.
Special restrictions are in place to keep some inmates from exerting influence over or making threats to people outside the prison, which helps US authorities control prisoners who have sway over militant groups or criminal enterprises — such as the Sinaloa cartel, which Guzman commanded during two stints in Mexican prisons.
Regime change is the only remedy, and if China won't allow it, as it wants a buffer against the West, then the only rational response to a rogue country pursuing nuclear weapons and intercontinental ballistic missiles and making threats to use them is to threaten to arm the surrounding countries with nuclear arms and missile defense systems.
After the completion of the documentary, Tiny was arrested for making threats to public officials.
She was convicted of making threats to kill and served 18 weeks in an attendance centre.
Principal Conclusions and Overall Assessment of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry. The Stationery Office. p.17 The paratroopers disembarked and began seizing people. There were many claims of paratroopers beating people, clubbing them with rifle butts, firing rubber bullets at them from close range, making threats to kill, and hurling abuse.
Ultimately, Tunstall lost the election after only collecting 17 percent of the vote. His candidacy was the subject of the documentary film, A Man Among Giants. After the completion of the film, Tunstall was arrested for making threats to public officials. The film's director Rod Webber bailed him out of jail, and Tunstall was subsequently committed to a mental hospital.
On 9 May 2014, Tiwari was arrested for allegedly raping his girlfriend, while his brother was booked on complaint of making threats to her life. However, the complainant failed to support the prosecution version during the trial due to lack of evidence against him and his brother. On April 2017, both Tiwari and his brother were acquitted from all charges by the Mumbai Sessions Court.
This was in relation to local Klan members in Ferguson, Missouri, making threats to shoot anyone who provoked them while protesting the shooting of Michael Brown. Anonymous also hijacked the group's Twitter page, and this resulted in veiled threats of violence against members of Anonymous. In November 2015, a major release of information about the KKK was planned. Discredited information was released prematurely and Anonymous denied involvement.
In 2014, a man deliberately rammed the newly installed monument with a car, knocking it over and breaking the tall stone into several large pieces. He fled the scene, but was subsequently arrested by the United States Secret Service after making threats to attack a federal building in Oklahoma City. An unidentified law enforcement officer told a local news broadcaster that the man said the devil made him commit the act.Brandes, Heide.
However, after he convinces Yugiri to apologize and tries to get his wife to accept the apology, he asks her to light his pipe and she complains: "I'm sure my flame will be terrible! Hmph!" ; :Seikichi, an employee, makes the rounds at the second floor of a brothel and is accosted individually by four customers who are all waiting for the Kisegawa. The men are angry and start making threats to him.
Ali is able to convince the mullah by making threats to tell the village about his past as a convict. Ali's marriage to the teenager is conditional on Ali's ability to save the girl's father, a doctor who has been sentenced to death for an unspecified crime. Soraya has two sons whom Ali wants. After a woman dies, Ali asks Zahra to persuade Soraya to care for the woman's now-widowed husband.
Much later, Jeckeln's driver, Johannes Zingler, claimed in testimony that Jeckeln had forced him to join in as a killer by making threats to harm Zingler's family. In similar massacres in Russia and the Ukraine, there were many accounts contrary to Zingler's to the effect that participation was voluntary, and even sometimes sought after, and that those who refused to take part in shootings suffered no adverse consequences.Klee and others, eds., The Good Old Days. pp. 76-86.
He was convicted of attempted murder in 2005 and he was sentenced to twenty years in prison, which was later shortened to fifteen years. Despite a history of violence while behind bars, he was released in October 2015. He had been detained in February 2017 for allegedly making threats to kill police, but was released due to lack of evidence. No evidence of radicalization was found, and he was never placed on a terror watch list.
The two engage in a subtle cat-and-mouse game, and Ching begins to fear for her life when Ling starts making threats to remove her kidney too. One night, Ching is kidnapped by a mysterious man that seems to be an ally of Ling's. Here, Ching reveals that her kidney is weak, and the man will not be able to sell it for much. She passes out, and wakes to find Ling injured beside her.
On April 25, 2018, Atwal was arrested at his home and charged for making threats to a local British Columbia host. According to documents, he faces charges for "uttering threats to cause death or bodily harm". His lawyer Marvin Stern stated that he made threats outside a Punjabi radio station in the Vancouver suburb of Surrey, British Columbia. The day after his arrest, he made an appearance in provincial court, but was released without cash or surety.
Fletcher stated that Marta became more "dark and ludicrously disturbing" as the series progressed. He predicted that she would be murdered by the end of the series. The writer concluded that "when not watching her own violent, druggy sex tapes, she's making threats to John Ross, doing some crazy-eye, head-wobbling manic acting and generally causing mayhem for the entire Southfork clan." Vanessa Millones from Latina magazine also believed that Marta was crazy and lived up to the "Latina loca stereotype".
Governor Alvin Hovey, an American Civil War general who had campaigned in part on the white cap problem, was the next governor to combat them. He continued his predecessor's attempt to have local law enforcement play a role in stopping the white caps, but ratcheted up the rhetoric by making threats to remove local law enforcement from office and declare martial law in towns where lynchings occurred. His threats were somewhat successful, and only two lynchings occurred during his term.Gugin, p.
Shortly after the incident, Robert McLeod and his two sons Barry and Scott were charged with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, assaulting a public officer, obstructing an officer and making threats to kill. In March 2009, a District Court jury found the accused not guilty of all charges relating to the assault on Constable Butcher. McLeod's lawyers argued the accused acted in self defence when confronted by police, who they said acted with excessive force as they attempted to arrest them.
Upon discovering her in his kitchen, Paul instructs Zach to throw out all of their food as Felicia may have tried to poison them both. Felicia then calls the police from her home and reports that her neighbor Paul Young has been threatening her. Whilst phoning the police, she is in the process of pumping large quantities of her own blood from her body. The police inform Felicia that no action can be taken against Paul by just making threats, to which she replies that she will just have to deal with the problem herself.
Murphy plead guilty to one charge of possession of a drug of dependence and was released without charge on a 12-month good behavior bond. His lawyer also made an unsuccessful bid to suppress the details of the charge. In 2017, Murphy was sentenced to 6 months in prison after pleading guilty to 28 charges including unlawful assault, aggravated burglary and making threats to kill. The charges related to a series of attacks on his former partner, Jill Scott, one of which involved him holding her down and burning her finger with a blowtorch.
He was in federal custody since being arrested in May 2008 in Boston. Weigman was involved in making threats to a Verizon Security Officer, and attempted to hack into a US attorney's voice-mail system in Dallas. Weigman pleaded guilty to: "…one count of conspiracy to retaliate against a witness, victim or an informant, and one count of conspiracy to commit access device fraud and unauthorized access of a protected computer." Weigman admitted that he and his allies gained unauthorized access to telecommunication companies' sensitive information to gather personal information on certain people.
The true threat doctrine was established in the 1969 Supreme Court case Watts v. United States. In that case, an eighteen-year-old male was convicted in a Washington, D.C. District Court for violating a statute prohibiting persons from knowingly and willfully making threats to harm or kill the President of the United States. The conviction was based on a statement made by Watts, in which he said, "[i]f they ever make me carry a rifle the first man I want to get in my sights is L.B.J." Watts appealed, leading to the Supreme Court finding the statute constitutional on its face, but reversing the conviction of Watts.
In December 2015 Martin was accused of making threats to stab a woman with a chopstick after she asked him to be respectful of other diners at the Mr Miyagi Japanese restaurant in Windsor in Melbourne's inner-south-east. The woman in question contacted Richmond to complain two days after the alleged incident occurred on the Saturday night of 5 December. She alleged Martin had been drunk, loud and offensive and when confronted, threatened to stab her in the face with a chopstick. In addition, she claimed Martin had slammed his hand into the wall next to her head when she said threatened to contact the club about the incident.
This comeback was going to be even shorter than his previous one, and followed by a much longer absence from the show. Determined to continue the feud with Mark, Nick starts making threats to Mark's pregnant girlfriend Lisa and soon causes the death of Ashley after sabotaging the brakes on Mark's motorbike, only for Ashley to steal and crash it. Following Ashley's death, Dot overhears an argument between Nick and Mark and realises that Nick had tampered with the brakes on Mark's motorbike. After Ashley's funeral, Dot banishes Nick from her life and tells him to leave and never return, as she would never be able to forgive him.
The true threat doctrine was established in the 1969 Supreme Court case Watts v. United States. In that case, an eighteen-year-old male was convicted in a Washington, D.C. District Court for violating a statute prohibiting persons from knowingly and willfully making threats to harm or kill the President of the United States. The conviction was based on a statement made by Watts, in which he said, "[i]f they ever make me carry a rifle the first man I want to get in my sights is L.B.J." Watts appealed, leading to the Supreme Court finding the statute constitutional on its face, but reversing the conviction of Watts.
Barney Bubbles, who suffered from manic depression, committed suicide in London on 14 November 1983 by gassing himself, trapping the fumes in a plastic bag he placed over his head, at the age of 41. He had considerable personal and financial worries, and had fallen out of fashion in the early 1980s. His designs for record sleeves were being rejected by musicians and record companies, and he was being investigated by the Inland Revenue for unpaid taxes dating back several years.No Sleep Till Canvey Island: The Great Pub Rock Revolution, Will Birch (Virgin Books 2000, 2003) He was also displaying increasingly erratic behaviour, alarming close friends by lacerating his face with razorblades and making threats to kill.
In November 2004, controversy began to surround Sgro as questions arose surrounding her activities during the June election earlier that year. Several members of her ministerial staff had filed expense claims to travel to and work in her riding throughout the campaign ending on election day. More serious claims were also raised when Opposition Conservative MPs claimed she had given a special immigration permit to a campaign supporter – specifically Alina Balaican, a Romanian who had initially been admitted to the country to work as a stripper. New Democratic Party MP Pat Martin also accused Sgro's aides of making threats to deny ministerial permits to his constituents if he criticized her on the stripper controversy.
He was charged with unlawful assault, assault with a weapon, making threats to kill, possessing cannabis and cultivating a narcotic plant. The case against him collapsed, however, when Yildirim refused to testify after being repeatedly harassed. Terrence Tognolini was later implicated in the murder of Vicki Joy Jacobs, a 37-year- old woman who was shot six times as she slept next to her six-year-old son in her apartment in Long Gully, Bendigo on June 12, 1999. The previous year, Jacobs had given evidence that helped convict her ex-husband Gerald David Preston for the August 1996 murders of drug dealer and mechanic Les Knowles and his employee Tim Richards in Adelaide, and her testimony implicated the Hells Angels in hiring Preston for the killings.
FPS collaborates with other components within DHS and has established liaisons with agencies having a protective and investigative mission such as the U.S. Secret Service—National Threat Assessment Center, Social Security Administration (SSA), U.S. Marshals Service, FBI, U.S. Postal Inspection Service and various state and local police agencies throughout the country. FPS special agents have made arrests and conducted investigations of subjects charged with making inappropriate communications and threats to members of the U.S. Congress (House and Senate) and/or their staff, the director of Federal Emergency Management Agency, FPS Director, members of the military reserve, SSA, the Department of Veteran Affairs and other federal employees. Many of these investigations resulted in convictions for making threats to do physical harm and threats to bomb federal facilities. FPS special agents investigated threats delivered in person, via telephone, e-mail and U.S. Postal Service mail.
In addition to making threats to open less desirable establishments in its stead, he gathered support by attracting the attention of local and national media, and at times employed the Hells Angels in order to attract attention and threaten local sensibilities. The arcade survived for 12 years, and was well known for its unique architecture, and balance of classic and contemporary arcade and amusement games."Scrappy Arcade Owner Gives Up the Fight" Published: September 20, 1994 New York Times Arnie's Place also had a pool hall attached, and in the late 1980s also added an adjacent ice cream parlor, complete with animatronic ice cream cone characters, and other characters."WESTPORT'S DENIAL OF ARCADE BATTLED" By JOHN CAVANAUGH Published: December 6, 1981 New York Times"6-FOOT-5 PAC-MAN IS SCORING IN WESTPORT" By WILLIAM E. GEIST, Special to the New York Times Published: April 27, 1983"WESTPORT AWAITS FACE-OFF" By ROBERT E. TOMASSON Published: May 9, 1982 New York Times"VIDEO GAMES INDUSTRY COMES DOWN TO EARTH" By N. R. KLEINFIELD Published: October 17, 1983 New York Times"Westport, Kaye Tangle in Court Again" The Hour - Feb 3, 1994"Westport to Rule Tonight on Arnie's Place Permit" The Hour - Jul 26, 1982 Kaye also built, on a neighboring property, the New York-style International Deli.

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