Custodial in a sentence as an adjective

The only listing that came up was for a custodial position that required the employee to maintain a "sharp appearance".

", making clear that the focus is on the reasons for--as opposed to the mere existence of--custodial life sentences.

His counsel at the time of his ******* wrote in a postmortem on the case that he believed Swartz stood little chance of any custodial sentence, even were he to be convicted.

These rules are consumer protection laws and make sense for businesses that offer custodial accounts denominated in bitcoin or dollars.

I don't believe in long custodial sentences for non-violent crimes, especially if they're victim-less, but arson is not non-violent.

So the parent who has custody gets taken in by family along with the child or services intended to benefit the child also benefit the custodial parent.

We generally prefer citizens to know of their fifth amendment protections prior to a custodial interrogation.

By making the headline about the undesirability of custodial life sentences in general, they'er losing a large chunk of their potential audience straight out of the gate.

Chiming in as per usual to note that Swartz's own lawyer wrote in a blog post after the tragedy that he believed Swartz was unlikely to receive a custodial sentence of any sort even had he taken the case to trial and been found guilty.

Custodial definitions

adjective

providing protective supervision; watching over or safeguarding; "daycare that is educational and not just custodial"; "a guardian angel"; "tutelary gods"

See also: tutelary tutelar