Tribunal in a sentence as a noun

What kind of a tribunal is that?This is dystopian beyond words.

Note that Saddam was tried and sentenced by an Iraqi court, not an international tribunal even though US soldiers caught him.

In the UK that would be interpreted as 'constructive dismissal' and you could be spanked pretty hard for that at an employment tribunal.

This tribunal has the power to overrule Australian laws and levy fines against the Australian state.

There was a time not long ago when wiretaps weren't yet considered searches, and where voicing support for communism could get you dragged in front of a tribunal.

Rather, the claim has been forced to be filed with the IPT, a secret tribunal that does not make its proceeding public or have to justify reasons for its decisions.

It would be very easy to lean on a few tribunal members, and with no pressure in the opposite direction, which way we do reasonably expect them to act?

Combine this with the fact that enemies can report you without specifying a reason means a percentage of players who get punished shouldn't be in the tribunal to begin with.

The employee interviewed in the OA would have recourse to an employment tribunal for what used to be called 'constructive dismissal' - the terminology may have changed recently.

'Under the TPP, if a company believes an Australian law endangers its expected future profits, it can challenge the government at an investor-state tribunal.

Saying that Al Awalki has due process rights, and that those rights are satisfied in his peculiar circumstances by consideration of an executive tribunal, does less violence to the rule of law than trying him in abstentia.

Arbitrary justiceThe president now decides whether a person will receive a trial in the federal courts or in a military tribunal, a system that has been ridiculed around the world for lacking basic due process protections.

Tribunal definitions

noun

an assembly (including one or more judges) to conduct judicial business

See also: court judicature