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43 Sentences With "sheriff's officer"

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

A sheriff's officer told him and his girlfriend that they had 10 minutes to leave.
" A sheriff's officer standing nearby motioned to Mr. Dear with his hand, and said politely, "Mr.
The Jacksonville Sheriff's Officer identified the victims as Eli "trueboy" Clayton, 219, and Taylor "SpotMePlzzz" Robertson, 27.
A sheriff's officer watches as students get off buses after being evacuated to the Highlands Ranch Recreation Center.
After the shooting, a sheriff's officer said, Johnson called deputies to say that he had shot his neighbor.
"I would rather have a school resource officer, usually they're a sheriff's officer, in every school," he said.
"I would rather have a school resource officer -- usually they're a sheriff's officer -- in every school," he said.
Less than two miles south of the hospital, a sheriff's officer shot and wounded a man on Monday evening.
Mr. Shipman knew that, which is why he recorded his interactions with the sheriff's officer and maintained an almost impossible level of politeness throughout.
Together, the guard and the sheriff's officer corralled the cows in the parking lot and used their cars to temporarily pen them in, Cochrane said.
Anne Marie Mueller is consoled by LA County Sheriff's officer Ernie Ferreras after notifying her that her friends were safe from the Woolsey Fire in Malibu.
A Los Angeles County sheriff's officer stationed outside her house said Peggy and Stephen were married for six years and divorced more than 27 years ago.
A sheriff's officer happily reunited with a girl he saved just hours earlier as she celebrated her fourth birthday at a local pool in Panama City, Florida.
Rick Dirr, the Nederland fire chief, said his largely volunteer firefighters no longer answer nighttime calls in the woods without a marshal or sheriff's officer as backup.
For example, a local sheriff's officer may be called to visit an individual's home multiple times while responding to mental health interventions, which could result in a mental health referral rather than an involuntary commitment or arrest.
According to People, Gordon's current girlfriend, identified as Laura Leal, filed a report with the Seminole County Sheriff's officer alleging that Gordon had beaten her and held her captive in the home where the couple live together.
The son of a Mexican immigrant who was a sheriff's officer in Sacramento, Mr. Guzman moved to San Francisco in the mid-1990s and was making good money as a real estate broker until the dot-com bust.
Some parents of the victims of the deadly shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School have called for a renewed investigation into Broward County Sheriff's Officer Scot Peterson, who handled an assault case that involved Sheriff Scott Israel's son.
And then the 14-year-old freshman who dreams about one day whirling across the globe as a travel journalist hopped out of her mom's car, threaded her way past a sheriff's officer and joined the river of children in burgundy T-shirts making their way back in.
In March 2012, a Houston Chronicle reporter was terminated because of her prior work as an exotic dancer; a month later a California teacher was fired because she had formerly been a porn actor; in 2018, a New Jersey Sheriff's officer lost her job because she was previously a dominatrix.
John Rocque of 1746 Hackman was hanged at Tyburn on 19 April 1779. He travelled there in a mourning coach, accompanied by the sheriff's officer and two fellow clergymen, the Rev. Moses Porter, a curate friend from Clapham, and the Rev. John Villette, the chaplain of Newgate Prison.
Charles Danby as Roberts, the Sheriff's Officer, posing as an American millionaire Robert Pateman as Major O'Neill meets his Creditors Theatrical poster for The Lady Slavey (1894) Based on the story of Cinderella, Irishman Major O'Neill (Robert Pateman) is faced with bankruptcy and financial ruin after running up large milliners bills for his daughters Maud (Adelaide Astor) and Beatrice (Blanche Barnett). In an attempt to stave off this disaster, with the assistance of Flo Honeydew (Jenny McNulty) he attempts to marry off his youngest daughter Phyllis (May Yohé) - the slavey of the title - to a rich man she doesn't love. Phyllis loves Vincent A. Evelyn (Henry Beaumont). She, assisted by Roberts, a Sheriff's Officer (Charles Danby) is determined to avoid this fate.
In addition to portions being designated the Loneliest Road and Lincoln Highway, the portion concurrent with Interstate 580 in Carson City is designated the Carson City Deputy Sheriff Carl Howell Memorial Freeway in honor of a sheriff's officer who was shot to death while attempting to rescue a victim of domestic violence from her house.
Levy was born in London, the eldest child of Lawrence Levy (c.1803–1873) and Rebecca Jacobs (c.1804–1874). His father was a sheriff's officer, bill discounter, wine merchant and owner and manager of theatres. Levy qualified as a solicitor in 1848 after serving as an articled clerk to his uncle, Charles Lewis (c.1801–1864).
Born in Blandford Forum, Dorset, Frederick Abberline was the youngest son of Edward Abberline, a saddlemaker, sheriff's officer and clerk of the market, minor local government positions; and his wife Hannah (née Chinn). Edward Abberline died in 1849, and his widow opened a small shop and brought up her four children, Emily, Harriett, Edward and Frederick, alone.
The Archbishop of Glasgow, James Boyd of Trochrig, was brought into the affair when the blacksmiths took official steps to try and repair their reputations. William Dougal, sheriff's officer, is also said to have taken a bribe of £3 not to find the plough-irons.Scott, Page 93 Bessie's public profile had been growing and unwanted attention was focussing on her activities.
Robert Cabot Sherman Jr. (born July 22, 1943) is an American singer, actor and occasional songwriter who became a teen idol in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He had a series of successful singles, notably the million-seller "Little Woman" (1969). Sherman retreated from his show business career in the 1970s for a career as a paramedic and a sheriff's officer, though he occasionally performed into the 1990s.
In 2008, Councilman Alan Souto, at the time an officer with the Passaic County Sheriff's Department, was arrested for stealing heroin and cocaine from the evidence room from the sheriff's department in order to distribute narcotics, amounting to over $250,000. After being found guilty, he was sentenced to 85 months in federal prison in May 2009.Cowen, Richard. "Ex- Passaic Sheriff's officer sentenced to 85 months", The Record, May 18, 2009.
Palm Beach County Sheriff's Officer was arrested after putting a GPS tracker on a woman's car and stalking her. This woman was married but was having an affair with a Sheriff named Jose Miguel Fernandez. The woman ended up ending the affair with Fernandez but after the fact he meet her on three occasions out of the blue. The husband ended up finding the GPS tracker under the car and Fernandez said he did it because the husband threatened his son.
Kidnapped cover, by William Brassey Hole, London edition, Cassell and Company, 1886 As he continues his journey, David encounters none other than the Red Fox (Colin Roy) himself, who is accompanied by a lawyer, a servant, and a sheriff's officer. When David stops the Campbell man to ask him for directions, a hidden sniper kills the King's hated agent. David is denounced as a conspirator and flees for his life, but by chance reunites with Alan. The youth believes Alan is the assassin, but Alan denies responsibility.
Emney's family had theatrical connections: his uncles were the comic performers Arthur Williams and Fred Williams (c.1847–1916). Emney made his stage debut at Sadler's Wells Theatre in a cast led by Nellie Farren."Mr Fred Emney", The Times, 8 January 1917, p. 6 One of his earliest successes was as Lurcher, the sheriff's officer, in the comic opera Dorothy, succeeding Arthur Williams in the role; the uncle played it more than 900 times, and the nephew made over 800 appearances in it.
The two men offer him £500 to leave the country and never return; it seems Claude is engaged to a rich widow, and they are anxious to avoid any scandal that might endanger the marriage. Raymond turns it down, however, and departs the same day. He obtains work as a sheriff's officer, helping a bailiff serve a writ on Crystal Wetherby (Purcell), a woman in serious debt, taking possession of her property. The bailiff instructs him to remain in Crystal's mansion to keep an eye on the seized property until the next day, but also to provide any reasonable assistance to the woman.
In 1844, he was appointed consul at Fuchow in China, where, after a short official stay at Amoy, he performed the functions, as he expressed it, "of everything from a lord chancellor to a sheriff's officer." Fuchow was one of the ports opened to trade by the Treaty of Nanking, and Alcock had to perform an entirely new role with regard to the Chinese authorities. He served there for 18 months, arriving in March 1845 (his wife followed shortly after, when appropriate accommodation was found, and his sister in law Emma S. Bacon, and mother in law, Mrs. Bacon, arrived one year later).
Arthur Williams as William Lurcher (A Sheriff's Officer), in Dorothy Edwardes's first show was Dorothy. Although Dorothy called itself a comic opera, as did most of the British musical works of the era that were neither burlesque, pantomime nor low farce, Dorothy incorporated some of the elements that US duo Harrigan and Hart were using on Broadway, integrating music and dance into the story line of the comedy. Edwardes sold that production, but it went on to become the longest-running hit that the musical stage had ever seen. Edwardes then returned the theatre to burlesque for a half dozen more years.
Lou Maluga and a few of his bodyguards are killed. Stacy, after confronting Scully and explaining how this doesn't affect her plans, is shot by her bodyguard "Insane Wayne," an undercover California Sheriff's officer. After collecting all the survivors, several quickly confess that they hijacked Alexa and her car, picked up the undercover officer, and executed him with Alexa's weapon, before forcing her to confess to his murder and shooting her in the head. Finding a fire alarm going off in the basement, Scully heads down there to find John Bodine, whom Scully had befriended after a fashion, performing an African tribal dance around Alexa's body.
Falcon Press began encountering financial difficulties in the early 1950s. The official receiver was called in to Falcon Press (London) Ltd in 1954, and discovered a total deficiency of £290,823. A creditors' meeting in July 1954 was told that the company was "well on the rocks" by March 1950, and so often had a sheriff's officer attended at the company offices that the staff had bought a wreath on learning of his death. With Baker himself in the nursing home, his father (who was also a director) claimed that high production costs, insufficiently selective choice of books to publish and insufficient sales pressure, were responsible for the failure.
Section 642(2): Jurors may be summoned under subsection (1) by word of mouth, if necessary. Section 642(3): The names of the people who are summoned under this Section shall be added to the general panel for the purposes of the trial, and the same proceedings with respect to calling, challenging, excusing and directing them shall apply to them. According to the case of R v Mid-Valley Tractor Sales Limited (1995 CarswellNB 313), there are limitations on the powers granted by Section 642. These powers are conferred specifically upon the judge, and the section does not confer a further discretion to delegate that power to others, such as the sheriff's officer, even with the consent of counsel.
The story takes place mainly in the small-town mountain community of Nota Lake, California (population 2,356, elevation 4,312), where Kinsey has inherited a client named Selma Newquist from her periodic boyfriend Robert Dietz. He is temporarily out of action back home in Carson City, where Kinsey has been taking care of him following knee surgery. Selma's brief is vague: she fears her husband Tom, a sheriff's officer who died of a heart attack a few weeks before, had something on his mind at the time of his death; and she wants Kinsey to find out what it was. With very little to go on, Kinsey finds the residents of the insular community are not forthcoming.
I-580 and US 395 route markers between Carson City and Reno I-580 runs from an intersection with US 50 in Carson City to an interchange with I-80 near downtown Reno. The only portion remaining to be constructed is the interchange at the freeway's southern terminus. Within Reno, the freeway is designated as the Martin Luther King, Jr., Freeway. Within Carson City, the freeway is designated the Carson City Deputy Sheriff Carl Howell Memorial Freeway, in honor of a sheriff's officer who was shot to death while attempting to rescue a victim of domestic violence from her house. The freeway begins at the junction of US 395 with the Lake Tahoe leg of US 50 and follows the eastern edge of Eagle Valley, where most of the population of Carson City resides.
The riot was mentioned in a number of Scottish radical journals in the following years. The "Battle of the Braes" (Scottish Gaelic: Blàr a' Chumhaing) took place on Skye less than a decade later, in 1882, when crofters began a rent strike and confronted the Portree Sheriff's Officer sent to enforce eviction notices against them, forcing him to burn the documentation. This resulted in the deployment of around 50 police officers from Glasgow to the area, who were met by an angry mob of men, women and children armed with improvised weapons. The Crofters' War took place about ten years later, and led to the founding of the Napier Commission, which led to compromises being made on behalf of the crofters, and the reform of crofting in Scotland, beginning with the passing of the Crofters' Holdings (Scotland) Act 1886.
The Turra Coo painted with the slogan "Lendrum to Leeks" Sheriff's Officer George Keith poinded the only piece of property which was easily mobile: Paterson's white milk cow, which was set to be sold in Turriff on 9 December, the delay being due to the fact that both of Turriff's agricultural marts supported Paterson and refused to handle the sale, requiring a special licence to be granted for a public sale and an auctioneer to be brought in from elsewhere. On the appointed day, the cow was taken from Paterson's farm and led to Turriff on foot. The citizens of Turriff found the cow tied in the village square, decorated in ribbons and painted with the words 'Lendrum to Leeks' in reference to Lloyd George's Welsh origin, and representing the sheriff's and government's victory over the hostile farmers. The cow was put up for auction.
Barley Barber Swamp protesters entering swamp through waterway Martin County sheriff's officer climbs tree to bring out tree sitter Stevie Lowe in Barley Barber Swamp Beginning on 5 January 2009, 30 environmental activists staged a five-day vigil along the Barley Barber Swamp to draw attention to what they claimed were damages being wrought by the power company's 3,705 megawatt Martin County plant. They also claimed that the swamp and its waterway is not a part of Florida Power & Light property but rather Waters of the State and Waters of the U.S, held for use by the public. The activists claim that the Martin County power plant is drawing water from the aquifer below the swamp causing the soil to subside below the root systems of the trees, resulting in declining forest health. On January 10, seventeen of the activists were arrested for trespassing.
The Preceptory gained somewhat of a reputation for fraud and abusing their privileges during the 13th and 14th centuries. The preceptory gained land in Compton on the outskirts of the town of Ashbourne, Derbyshire; but the Hospitallers were unpopular in the town (at the time a Royal Borough), and the complaints are recorded as early as 1276. Their privileges included certifying as correct the gallon and bushel measures: they abused this privilege by allowing their tenants to sell bread and bear in false measures. The Hospitallers were also able to extend their privileges, such as freedom from road and bridge tolls, to their tenants; this further aided their unpopularity as the royal borough of Ashbourne was seen to suffer as the Hospitallers increased their number of tenants and profiteered further. Similar dodgy dealings occurred in 1330 when a brother of the order, William Brix, slammed the door of the manor house at Barlow in the face of the Sheriff's Officer who had come to check the order's weights and measures.

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