Discretion in a sentence as a noun

The fact that paypal can use its sole discretion just tips the scales in their favor.

Prosecutors have discretion over what cases they bring and are required to use it.

It's very worrying when a US Attorney implies that it's not their job to deploy that discretion.

Afterwards I found out though that entry into the US is completely the discretion of the border guards.

It simply did what it does on over 99% of such discretionary petitions: it used its discretion to deny it.

Because of this massive profusion of laws this, of course, leaves a huge amount of discretion at the hands of agents of the criminal justice system.

We are drowning in laws and their discretionary enforcement shapes our de facto legal and political landscape.

Of course a DoJ prosecutor is aware of the concept of prosecutorial discretion.

The system is very much geared to send to prison anyone that is charged with a crime, based on the system's trust in the concept of prosecutorial discretion.

Lobby for rules to enforce ethical use of prosecutorial discretion.

Modern law enforcement is all about discretionary enforcement, at every level from the cop on the beat up to prosecutors and judges.

In any deal that really matters, it is usually a mistake to proceed without lawyers and it is an equally big mistake to give the lawyers sole discretion in how to do the project.

So, for instance, an investor would loan $50K at 10% interest at a time when the company had little value but could elect to convert at, say, $.50/sh at any time in the sole discretion of the investor.

Unfortunately, many prosecutors abuse their discretion, and there is no way to inject uniform sanity into our system as it currently exists.

The agreement says:"Apple may determine for any reason and in its sole discretion not to select your Work for distribution"This means they can refuse distribution for any reason, and you do not need to do anything wrong to be refused.

There is so much "discretion" [3,4] afforded to regulatory agencies that the threat of fines and seizures over bizarre interpretations of the law by a Carmen Ortiz-style ambitious regulator is never far from your mind.

But having been involved in Occupy Oakland's legal and anti-repression work what we have found is that since police have discretion as to when they can turn the devices on and off and when to upload, the video always seems to be mysteriously missing whenever defense lawyers request it.

The Court's role in hearing such discretionary appeals is to step in and decide important questions of federal law or to determine who is right when the various lower federal appellate courts may have reached conflicting decisions on such points of law in way that cries out of definitive resolution by the highest court.

* Four days after being threatened with contempt, Levison presented the DOJ with a proposal to charge the DOJ $2000 to design and implement his own pen/trap system which would provide data to the DOJ only at the conclusion of the order's time window, with timely updates being provided only at Levison's discretion and only with an additional charge attached.

When I come to work here, you will have certain expectations about my discretion and ability to respect the companys need for privacy and my co-workers needs for privacy by not sharing things I see, hear, or are privy to with a third party, evenor especiallyif I am offered a financial inducement such as an attractive offer of employment with a company I respect.

Discretion definitions

noun

freedom to act or judge on one's own

noun

knowing how to avoid embarrassment or distress; "the servants showed great tact and discretion"

See also: discreetness circumspection prudence

noun

refined taste; tact

See also: delicacy

noun

the power of making free choices unconstrained by external agencies

noun

the trait of judging wisely and objectively; "a man of discernment"

See also: discernment