Malefactor in a sentence as a noun

Oyo is the beginning of the end for Vision 1 as its brand moves from incompetent to malefactor.

Bonus malefactor points for using targeted ads to reach those customers.

Try to get a sense whether there's a broad understanding among the faculty that the malefactor is a bad teacher.

' Or it could suggest that finding one malefactor in a group should make you suspicious of everybody else.

This means that a wanton malefactor such as Best Buy here had better watch out if it meets a determined adversary who is willing to play out the fight and expose its wrongs.

Why should I install twenty apps, each with their own background processes and attack surfaces and developer who might be bought out by a malefactor, when I can just have twenty bookmarks instead?

It seems far-fetched, but the possibility exists that a malefactor can literally edit every copy of a book from a central location.

The point of "diversity training" is that so when a company gets sued for discrimination, their HR department has documentation that the malefactor involved underwent diversity training.

The phrase "opportunities for coercion or vote buying/selling" in the above post refers to opportunities for a malefactor to be physically present while a voter is filling out the ballot and coerce/bribe the voter to fill out the ballot a certain way. Voting at a polling place guards against this by requiring that the voter cast a ballot privately, out of the view of anyone else.

Malefactor definitions

noun

someone who has committed a crime or has been legally convicted of a crime

See also: criminal felon crook outlaw