Spoliation in a sentence as a noun

This is called spoliation of evidence and is a crime that you and I, were we stewards of a company's data, would be put on the rack for.

Also enjoy the spoliation inference the prosecutor can now use against you.

So, our United States government protected a man who brazenly admits to the spoliation of evidence.

"The price to pay is high, but it's too late to be a pessimist: humanity has barely ten years to reverse the trend, become aware of the full extent of its spoliation of the Earth's riches and change its patterns of consumption.

"From a legal perspective, purging emails can lead to accusations of "spoliation of evidence," [2] which in some circumstances can lead to the judge instructing the jury that the jurors can presume that what you destroyed was harmful to your case.

How about a nation-scale spoliation of all diesel car owners, because these also kills more than Malaria?“Whatever it takes” doesn't make any sense, you have to weight the cost versus benefits of the actions, and in the case of gene drive, the cost is totally unknown and could be a total disaster.

In once instance, Magistrate Judge Grewal allowed Apple's motion for evidence spoliation against Samsung when it was revealed that Samsung failed to retain all dated documents required, but when Samsung asked the same to Apple just two days later, as it turned Apple also failed to retain their documents too, Grewal refused reasoning that Samsung's motion was one day after the tentative deadline.

Spoliation definitions

noun

(law) the intentional destruction of a document or an alteration of it that destroys its value as evidence

noun

the act of stripping and taking by force

See also: spoil spoilation despoilation despoilment despoliation