What's the difference between arrestee and perpetrator?

Arrestee


Definition:

  • (v.) The person in whose hands is the property attached by arrestment.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) He handcuffs me and then helps me into the van where I join several other arrestees from the protest.
  • (2) It’s hard to believe that 7,185 arrests is an accurate number of arrestees at Homan Square,” said the University of Chicago’s Futterman.
  • (3) That percentage aligns with Chicago police’s broader practice of providing minimal access to attorneys during the crucial early interrogation stage, when an arrestee’s constitutional rights against self-incrimination are most vulnerable.
  • (4) It also houses CPD’s Evidence Recovered Property Section, where the public is able to claim inventoried property,” the statement said, something numerous attorneys and one Homan Square arrestee have denied.
  • (5) Supportive data include increased potency of street level heroin, increased numbers of heroin-related deaths, increased detection of heroin positive urine specimens in the D.C. Superior Court arrestee population, increased demand for addiction treatment services and rising property crime rates.
  • (6) When questions were raised about the bail conditions placed on the 59, the police appeared to take some pride in the short amount of time taken to process the arrestees compared to the 182 arrested on a Critical Mass cycle ride during the Olympic Games in 2012.
  • (7) It described the measures as "standard arrestee intake procedures".
  • (8) "In London, police reported that 19% of arrestees – 337 suspects drawn from 169 different gangs – were identified as gang members," the report adds.
  • (9) Brian Jacob Church, the first arrestee to come forward to the Guardian regarding his time inside Homan Square, could not attend the protest but requested McDermott read a statement on his behalf.
  • (10) Chicago police continue to deny that the site is secret, though the facility does not produce a public record of arrestees at the station, unlike other precinct houses.
  • (11) But Homan Square is unlike Chicago police precinct houses, according to lawyers who described a “find-your-client game” and experts who reviewed data from the latest tranche of arrestee records obtained by the Guardian.
  • (12) The last large-scale roundup of US residents by the federal government, the internment of people of Japanese descent during the second world war, ultimately encompassed only about 110,000 arrestees, most of whom originally lived in a few major cities on the west coast.
  • (13) Their accounts point to violations of police directives , which say police must “complete the booking process” regardless of their interest in interrogating a suspect and must also “allow the arrestee to make a reasonable number of telephone calls to an attorney, family member or friend”, usually within “the first hour” of detention.
  • (14) The “factsheet” the police issued on 1 March instructs: “Officers will create an Automated Arrest Report, which identifies the location of the arrestee … An individual who wishes to consult a lawyer will not be interrogated until they have an opportunity to do so.” Additionally, activists and lawyers upset by their denial of access to Homan Square quietly met with police a few years ago to work out rules changes to permit them entry into the facility.
  • (15) This study probed demographics, drug use experimentation and frequency, age of first drug use, and drug use treatment among 53 female prostitutes and 47 female arrestees.
  • (16) Results indicate that DWI arrestees tended to be younger and unmarried but were more likely to complete treatment.
  • (17) Predictors of the recurrence of drunkenness arrests and the effect of detoxication treatment on outcome during a 12-14-month follow-up were studied among 560 arrestees.
  • (18) It comes from a Bond movie or something.” The narcotics, vice and anti-gang units operating out of Homan Square, on Chicago’s west side, take arrestees to the nondescript warehouse from all over the city: police data obtained by the Guardian and mapped against the city grid show that 53% of disclosed arrestees come from more than 2.5 miles away from the warehouse.
  • (19) The data are taken from a survey of intravenous drug use among arrestees at Oslo Central Police Station.
  • (20) Studies of DUI arrestees and jail inmates, however, suggest they have more extensive criminal histories than other licensed drivers and similar criminal histories to other jail inmates.

Perpetrator


Definition:

  • (n.) One who perpetrates; esp., one who commits an offense or crime.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The psychiatric experts classified 11 of the perpetrators as "normal," 3 as abnormal, and 2 as psychotic.
  • (2) Apnea monitoring did not prevent, and in fact perpetrated the illusion of SIDS in this infant.
  • (3) The committee's findings include that the attacks were not extensively planned by the perpetrators; the intelligence community did a good job of warning about the risk of an attack but a bad job of summarizing the attack when it happened; the state department screwed up by not beefing up security at the mission; nobody blocked any military response; and that the Obama administration was slow to produce a paper trail but was generally not a sinister actor in the episode.
  • (4) Let us be clear: these children are victims, not perpetrators,” he said.
  • (5) The perpetrator was either a relative or a "trusted other" in 97.2% of sexual abuse cases.
  • (6) Reports of violence associated with delusional misidentification are reviewed and four patients described who were either perpetrators or victims of assaults as a consequence of the syndromes of Frégoli, Intermetamorphosis, Subjective Doubles and Capgras.
  • (7) At least half of the perpetrators in 100 rampages studied by the New York Times were found to have signs of serious mental health issues, and it was reported last week that Adam Lanza's mother was in the process of having him committed when he embarked on the Newtown rampage.
  • (8) Even when things are taken more seriously, harassers are generally allowed to leave quietly, which enables them to move some place else and do the same thing.” Many of the women who made complaints to their institutions said they felt they were the ones on trial, while alleged perpetrators were often protected by management who feared losing a star researcher and their funding.
  • (9) Violence appears to mobilise people against the perpetrators, the study found.
  • (10) The court itself concluded that 'torture is perpetrated systematically by the General Intelligence Directorate'.
  • (11) For me, this is what needs to change - we need a cultural shift in our attitudes and behaviours and that needs to see all of us standing up and calling out harassment and misogyny, whether it is in the street or the workplace, to erode that normalisation that makes perpetrators feel safe doing it again and again.
  • (12) After her release, she confirmed that she had been pressured by threats and menaces to confess to criminal acts that she had never perpetrated.
  • (13) It says family violence involves partners, siblings, parents, children and distant family members, yet the state’s approach “responds almost exclusively to adult female victims (and dependent children) and adult male perpetrators ...
  • (14) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Britain needs to talk about the R-word: racism It is also a wakeup call to those who recognise racism only when it is played out like a scene from Django Unchained , those who think that racism has to be some vulgar incident perpetrated only by the backward, ignorant and poorly educated, those who believe that racism has to be an act, rather than a complicated and intangible framework that sets up obstacles.
  • (15) A disproportionate number of those who are victims and perpetrators of knife crime are African-Caribbean.
  • (16) The DSM-III diagnoses made on discharge were not related to presence of abuse, age of abuse onset, duration and frequency of abuse, or relationship of the victim to the perpetrator.
  • (17) The reality is the perpetrators of these crimes are overwhelmingly men.
  • (18) They only have to hear the voice of the perpetrator and they’re in this dissociative state,” Miller said.
  • (19) It explains the failure to unearth evidence of assassination: because state-appointed aviation experts conducted the investigation, their conclusion that it had been an accident proves that the state remains in the hands of the perpetrators (Law and Justice defence minister Antoni Macierewicz described their investigation as the greatest cover-up “in the history of the world”).
  • (20) Using a definition under which adolescent relationship abuse can occur in person or through electronic means, in public or private, and between current or past dating partners , the survey estimates that 25 million US adolescents are victims and nearly 23 million are perpetrators.

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