inmate$39374$ - определение. Что такое inmate$39374$
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Что (кто) такое inmate$39374$ - определение

AMERICAN MASS MURDERER
Kevin Cooper inmate; Kevin Cooper (inmate); Kevin Cooper (murderer); Chino Hills murders

Prisoner         
  • US Marshals and prisoners on board a Con Air flight
  • ''To Visit the Imprisoned'' by Flemish artist [[Cornelis de Wael]] c. 1640
  • Inmates in a prison yard
  • Finnish]] serial killer [[Johan Adamsson]], also known as "Kerpeikkari", in the 1849 lithography by [[Johan Knutson]]<ref>[https://www.finna.fi/Record/musketti.M012:HK10000:3979 Johan Knutsonin kivipiirros moninkertaisesta murhamiehestä Juhani Aataminpojasta]</ref> while he was imprisoned
  • A police bus used by the [[Maharashtra Police]] in [[Mumbai]], [[India]].
  • [[Gustave Doré]]'s image of the exercise yard at [[Newgate Prison]]&nbsp;(1872)
  • 1912 illustration of an inmate being punished in an American prison
  • A scene in [[Newgate Prison]], London
  • access-date=6 March 2020}}</ref>
PERSON WHO IS DEPRIVED OF LIBERTY AGAINST THEIR WILL
Prisoners; Inmates; Federal inmate; Inmate; Guest of Her Majesty; Guest of His Majesty; Psychological effects of incarceration; Prisonization; Prisonize
A prisoner (also known as an inmate or detainee) is a person who is deprived of liberty against their will. This can be by confinement, captivity, or forcible restraint.
inmate         
  • US Marshals and prisoners on board a Con Air flight
  • ''To Visit the Imprisoned'' by Flemish artist [[Cornelis de Wael]] c. 1640
  • Inmates in a prison yard
  • Finnish]] serial killer [[Johan Adamsson]], also known as "Kerpeikkari", in the 1849 lithography by [[Johan Knutson]]<ref>[https://www.finna.fi/Record/musketti.M012:HK10000:3979 Johan Knutsonin kivipiirros moninkertaisesta murhamiehestä Juhani Aataminpojasta]</ref> while he was imprisoned
  • A police bus used by the [[Maharashtra Police]] in [[Mumbai]], [[India]].
  • [[Gustave Doré]]'s image of the exercise yard at [[Newgate Prison]]&nbsp;(1872)
  • 1912 illustration of an inmate being punished in an American prison
  • A scene in [[Newgate Prison]], London
  • access-date=6 March 2020}}</ref>
PERSON WHO IS DEPRIVED OF LIBERTY AGAINST THEIR WILL
Prisoners; Inmates; Federal inmate; Inmate; Guest of Her Majesty; Guest of His Majesty; Psychological effects of incarceration; Prisonization; Prisonize
¦ noun a person living in an institution such as a prison or hospital.
Origin
C16 (denoting a lodger or subtenant): prob. orig. from inn + mate1, later assoc. with in.
prisoner         
  • US Marshals and prisoners on board a Con Air flight
  • ''To Visit the Imprisoned'' by Flemish artist [[Cornelis de Wael]] c. 1640
  • Inmates in a prison yard
  • Finnish]] serial killer [[Johan Adamsson]], also known as "Kerpeikkari", in the 1849 lithography by [[Johan Knutson]]<ref>[https://www.finna.fi/Record/musketti.M012:HK10000:3979 Johan Knutsonin kivipiirros moninkertaisesta murhamiehestä Juhani Aataminpojasta]</ref> while he was imprisoned
  • A police bus used by the [[Maharashtra Police]] in [[Mumbai]], [[India]].
  • [[Gustave Doré]]'s image of the exercise yard at [[Newgate Prison]]&nbsp;(1872)
  • 1912 illustration of an inmate being punished in an American prison
  • A scene in [[Newgate Prison]], London
  • access-date=6 March 2020}}</ref>
PERSON WHO IS DEPRIVED OF LIBERTY AGAINST THEIR WILL
Prisoners; Inmates; Federal inmate; Inmate; Guest of Her Majesty; Guest of His Majesty; Psychological effects of incarceration; Prisonization; Prisonize
(prisoners)
Frequency: The word is one of the 1500 most common words in English.
1.
A prisoner is a person who is kept in a prison as a punishment for a crime that they have committed.
The committee is concerned about the large number of prisoners sharing cells.
= inmate
N-COUNT
2.
A prisoner is a person who has been captured by an enemy, for example in war.
...wartime hostages and concentration-camp prisoners...
He was taken prisoner in North Africa in 1942.
N-COUNT: also hold/take n N
3.
If you say that you are a prisoner of a situation, you mean that your are trapped by it.
We are all prisoners of our childhood and feel an obligation to it...
N-COUNT: N of n

Википедия

Kevin Cooper (prisoner)

Kevin Cooper (born Richard Goodman; January 8, 1958) is an African-American man currently on death row at San Quentin Prison. Cooper was found guilty of four murders in the Chino Hills area of California in 1983. However, he has steadfastly maintained his innocence.

Cooper's conviction and death sentence has been highly controversial, garnering repeated attention from both Nicholas Kristof in the New York Times and Erin Moriarty on the CBS News program "48 Hours." There have been accusations that Cooper received an inadequate defense, as well as prosecutorial misconduct such as destruction of evidence, withholding exculpatory evidence from the defense, planting of evidence, brainwashing to witnesses, and perjured testimony by the Sheriff's Department. There have also been practical questions raised, such as how Cooper, at 155 pounds, and allegedly acting alone, overpowered a 6-foot, 2-inch ex-military policeman and his athletic wife, both of whom had loaded firearms close at hand. It has also been questioned why a single perpetrator would use 3 or 4 different weapons to commit the murders, and why none of the victims were able to run away while the others were being attacked.

Cooper's habeas corpus petitions have been denied. The evidence in the case of the original trial has been reviewed by the California Supreme Court, by the United States District Court and by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

In 2007, two judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit wrote that "As the district court and all state courts, have repeatedly found, evidence of Cooper's guilt was overwhelming. The tests for which he asked to show his innocence 'once and for all' show nothing of the sort." In a concurring opinion, however, Judge Margaret McKeown said she was troubled that the court could not resolve the question of Cooper's guilt "once and for all" and noted that significant evidence bearing on Cooper's culpability has been lost, destroyed or left unpursued. In a lecture, a distinguished federal appeals court judge, William A. Fletcher, declared "the San Bernardino Sheriff's Department framed him".

In a dissenting opinion, written in 2009, Judge Fletcher began by stating: "The State of California may be about to execute an innocent man." Fletcher wrote that the police may have tampered with the evidence and that the Ninth Circuit Court should have reheard the case en banc and should have "ordered the district judge to give Cooper the fair hearing he has never had." Five federal circuit court judges joined in Fletcher's dissent and five more stated that Cooper has never had a fair hearing to determine his innocence.