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Examples

  • The tale of what Jefferies' solicitor has called his client's "monstering" is a particularly lamentable one, but the full horror failed to come across.

    They'd built Charlotte Church up, and felt they could knock her down | Sketch 2011

  • Mr. Neil's attorney, Mike Shepard, has called his client's dismissal "disappointing news," and said that the company's accounting "was strongly supported."

    'Big' Was Diamond CEO's Style Hannah Karp 2012

  • Writing the court, Habermann's attorneys William Kopeny and Jennifer Horwitz called their client's words a "vitriolic verbal attack" and "inexcusable" but argued that he never intended to harm anyone.

    Seattle Post-Intelligencer: Local News 2011

  • During oral arguments in February, Mr. Watkins called his client's behaviour "sick" and "abhorrent" but said it wasn't a crime because Mr. Melchert-Dinkel didn't directly incite the victims to kill themselves.

    The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed 2011

  • Writing the court, Habermann's attorneys William Kopeny and Jennifer Horwitz called their client's words a "vitriolic verbal attack" and "inexcusable" but argued that he never intended to harm anyone.

    Seattle Post-Intelligencer: Local News 2011

  • Michael Garcia with Sacramento-based WeGrow, a company that helps medical marijuana grow their own pot, calls his client's patients, not druggies.

    News - chicagotribune.com 2011

  • During oral arguments in February, Watkins called his client's behavior "sick" and "abhorrent" but said it wasn't a crime because Melchert-Dinkel didn't directly incite the victims to kill themselves.

    Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion 2011

  • During oral arguments in February, Mr. Watkins called his client's behaviour "sick" and "abhorrent" but said it wasn't a crime because Mr. Melchert-Dinkel didn't directly incite the victims to kill themselves.

    The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed 2011

  • In yesterday's filing, Dowd called his client's conviction "a serious crime to be sure, but there is nothing about Mr. Rajaratnam's conduct, as found by the jury, to justify a sentence decades longer than the sentences ordinarily imposed in insider trading cases."

    BusinessWeek.com -- Top News 2011

  • During oral arguments in February, Watkins called his client's behavior "sick" and "abhorrent" but said it wasn't a crime because Melchert-Dinkel didn't directly incite the victims to kill themselves.

    Breaking News: CBS News 2011

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