Indict in a sentence as a verb

"But when the attorney general says, 'I don't want to indict people,' it's the Wild West.

In other words, there is no "double jeopardy" for trying to indict someone.

I just feel like this is another in a series of "let's indict education" posts.

Because otherwise one of them will get turned, they will then be pressured to get you to indict yourself.

No one sane would indict a giant corporate entity on this kind of evidence.

Rather, it taught me that the adage that a grand jury will indict a ham sandwich is an understatement.

An 18 year old would have to engage in some pretty dark stuff for me to indict them later in life as a subpar founder, partner or person.

Maybe the FBI is waiting to indict the various individuals involved once the civil suit is over.

Even if a person has a clean record, someone will find a way to indict that person of a crime, and that usually happens when laws change over time.

A better description would be that the prosecution can show a grand jury a **** sandwich and they will indict it as ham without looking up from their newspapers.

D'Ambrosio only got out of jail because the grand jury refused to indict, not because prosecutors weren't willing to prosecute.

And one of the things that goes with the unbridled power to decide who to indict and what charges will be brought; is the responsiblity to use that power appropriately.

To indict someone for "embrace & extend", you need both halves of the behavior: creation of new features, and unwillingness to support subsequent standards for those features.

I'm pretty happy to indict large bureaucratic organizations in general.

Or the one where the government is illegally storing as much private communication data as they can?You're going to have to indict nearly every politician in DC, including the President, if that's your standard.

From this fact comes the common saying among prosecutors, "I could indict a ham sandwich for the ****** of a pig."Most citizens are comforted by the notion, that no matter the unfairness in the initial process, eventually they will be able to present their case to a jury of their peers.

Indict definitions

verb

accuse formally of a crime