Killings
in sentence
417 examples of Killings in a sentence
It's rooted in a principle of retributive justice, or an eye for an eye, so retaliatory
killings
have led to several deaths in the area.
Now our first experiment of this resulted in a 67-percent drop in shootings and
killings
in the West Garfield neighborhood of Chicago.
And so we had to then, fortunately, get the funds to repeat this experience, and this is one of the next four neighborhoods that had a 45-percent drop in shootings and
killings.
There have been independent evaluations supported by the Justice Department and by the CDC and performed by Johns Hopkins that have shown 30-to-50-percent and 40-to-70-percent reductions in shootings and
killings
using this new method.
This is because honor
killings
are a real threat for untold numbers of women in the Arab region.
These items are recovered from numerous mass graves, and the main goal of this collection of the items is a unique process of identifying those who disappeared in the killings, the first act of genocide on European soil since the Holocaust.
Or that dark night when I was 16 when three little kids had come to me and they whispered in my ear that my friend was murdered in something called the honor
killings.
Honor
killings
is a custom where men and women are suspected of having relationships before or outside of the marriage, and they're killed by their family for it.
We focus on the complexities of youth and family discord, but our friends kept on nudging us to comment on drones and target
killings
to make the film "more relevant," essentially reducing these people who have entrusted us with their stories into sociopolitical symbols.
I saw the
killings.
(Gun shots) Since 2012, the world has witnessed the
killings
of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Sandra Bland, Tamir Rice and literally countless other unarmed black citizens at the hands of the police, who frequently walk away with no punishment at all.
But she also felt that these artworks memorialized the victims of these
killings
as well as other victims of racial violence throughout US history.
While showing in Berlin last year, a philosophy student asked me what prompted these recent
killings.
I showed him a photo of a lynching postcard from the early 1900s and reminded him that these
killings
have been going on for over 500 years.
We wondered if we could fill those very columns with the soil from the sites of where these
killings
occurred.
Take, for instance, when Black Lives Matter protesters go out to protest unjust
killings
of black citizens by police, and the pictures that emerge from the protest look like they could have been taken 50 years ago.
But this time, a young journalist and friend of the victims set out to expose the truth about these
killings.
It is the stories of resistance, the stories of defiance, the stories of resilience, that inspire people to get involved, not the stories of abuse and
killings
and hurt, because as humans, it's only natural for us to be scared.
We used to find out after the extrajudicial police
killings.
According to the Human Rights Campaign, there have been 128
killings
of trans people in 87 cities across 32 states since 2013.
And 80 percent of those
killings
were of trans women of color.
Women are still mistrusted, shamed, harmed and, in the worst cases, subjected to honor
killings
if they don't bleed on their wedding night.
We wish we could say that by removing these myths, everything would be OK, that shame, harm and honor
killings
would all just disappear.
And another counselor said to me after the training, "You know, I never knew why I survived the
killings
in my village, but now I know, because I am part of a nucleus of a new peaceful society in Afghanistan."
He does commit about 100 senseless, gory killings, at least, so the body count in this one is pretty awesome.
The ending is a muddle of
killings
and you don't know who's a doll who's real and who's dead!
He visits his local psychiatrist to see if he is losing his marbles; this proves to be a bad idea, since the shrink is actually a crazy murderer responsible for a spate of grisly
killings.
Sheila Morris (former Miss Sweden Janet Agren, given a hilarious "Southern belle" dub to show she's from Alabama) finds a connection between these
killings
and the disappearance of her sister Diana (Paola Senatore) and sets out to investigate.
Armand was as usual very good in the movie,,,the whole turks vs German thing was kind of strange because I remember seeing Bulgaria at the beginning of the movie...dint' bother to go back and check...the central theme is about the serial
killings
with the whole gang warfare loosely woven in.
There's 2 awesome
killings
then the movie goes straight to poop.
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