Teddy Roosevelt: He was America's Number-One crusader against business monopolies held by what he called the malefactors of great wealth. ❋ Unknown (2010)
More seriously, the approach of using fusion intelligence to attempt to identify malefactors is clearly a good approach, even though we know the government will do it poorly. ❋ Unknown (2010)
Somebody was obviously searching hard for an excuse to make sure that certain malefactors’ last years are indeed “golden” ones. ❋ Unknown (2009)
I do not ask this to minimize the threat from malefactors, which is certainly real enough. 9/11 bears stark witness to that. ❋ Unknown (2010)
In the outer court, for instance, were a hundred men called malefactors, for the most part Jews convicted of various political offences. ❋ Henry Rider Haggard (1890)
Not, of course, for today's Republicans, who instinctively side with those Theodore Roosevelt-dubbed "malefactors of great wealth." ❋ By PAUL KRUGMAN (2011)
And to see, even amongst us, how these two are united, how the former is up held by the latter: the magistrate sometimes cannot do his own office dexterously, but by acting the minister: hence it is, that judges of assizes find it necessary in their charges to use pathetical discourses of conscience; and if it were not for the sway of this, they would often lose the best evidence in the world against malefactors, which is confession: for no man would confess and be hanged here, but to avoid being damned hereafter. ❋ 1634-1716 (1823)
The case was bad then, for there they stood; the criminals stood in their own defence, and the tribes of Israel, who undertook to chastise them for their wickedness, were at a stand, when both in the first and in the second battle the malefactors were the victors; and the battle in Gibeah against the children of iniquity did not overtake them till the third engagement, and then did not overtake them all, for 600 made their escape. ❋ Unknown (1721)
When it was too late to matter, columnists like Bob Herbert wrote about financial "malefactors" who walk away "with a suspended sentence, and can't wait to get back to their nefarious activities." ❋ Unknown (2009)
Turn-of-the-century Americans didn't have to look up "malefactors" in the dictionary to know that it means "criminals." ❋ Unknown (2008)
Scholars have rarely studied the prominent role and symbolic value of the child in the accusations. 4 A shift in focus from the "malefactors" to the "victims" allows for a new emphasis on the theme of Jewish violence toward children, a theme that enlarges the number and variety of relevant sources. ❋ Unknown (2005)
Our Lord's cross was placed between those of the "malefactors," to add to the ignominy of his position. ❋ M.G. Easton (1897)
Nonetheless, there is a group of this kind of malefactors that, despite relative obscurity, have a rich and poetic history. ❋ Unknown (2009)
Grunt1: Before we decide [to rob] this [bank], let's wait for my malefactor.
Grunt2: [Nigger]... ❋ Guy In The ATM Line (2006)
That [malefactor] re-posted [my joke] as his own. ❋ Bgparker (2010)
[Knight] 1: "Watch out for that neer-do-well. He has tried to lie to and to [cheat] us before."
Knight 2:"Is there no rest for a [crestfallen malefactor]?" ❋ Slfr (2021)