Exonerate in a sentence as a verb

Can't exonerate blame based on one event and not the timeline.

" The pointy-haired boss who gave the orders isn't going to be able to exonerate you of the guilt.

Such problems are only evident 'at scale'.I'm not blaming or trying to exonerate anyone.

We generally use words like exonerate, absolve, or clear to mean "prove innocence.

Indeed it doesn't, but Github's point with these releases is to exonerate their company and their culture, not Tom Preston-Warner.

So I assume they're also using them to exonerate people who otherwise don't have an alibi but could be falsely accused, right?Right?

It would be very hard to stomach if that type of information is only available to convict, not exonerate.

If someone dies they can exonerate themselves in front of any medical review board that bothers to investigate.

If I was one of the accused, and I was innocent, I'd most definitely sue her. Being accused of sexual harassment in a very public way, in a very high profile case, is nothing to brush off. I'd want to have my day in court, to get the facts on the table, and exonerate myself.

Our ignoble idiots exonerate actions of legislators and leaders in Russia.

Can they send men to prison on account the information needed to exonerate them is classified, even if the person requesting the data is the same person under surveillance?

I am not exonerating Aaron's prosecutors, though the logical conclusion of your argument is that you would exonerate them, had Aaron reacted differently.

We don't exonerate the man in question, but there is quite a bit of general hand-wringing about whether our society raises boys to be violent, even to the extent that some people propose questionable solutions like banning violent video games.

How does it make sense for that group to literally delegate all their security to a news publishing organization?And having done that, by their own admission, how does pointing the finger at The Guardian's lack of opsec capability exonerate Wikileaks?

Exonerate definitions

verb

pronounce not guilty of criminal charges; "The suspect was cleared of the murder charges"

See also: acquit assoil clear discharge exculpate