This allows prisoners to not be detained if there is not evidence against them. It is useful so that no one can keep you in jail for false accusations.
Prison grooming requirements vary from state to state. Some prison systems require prisoners to keep their hair short while others allow prisoners to grow their hair out. If long hair is a religious requirement you might be able to get an exemption.
Brutally some didn't keep prisoners so they were killed
President Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus(under which judges can require arresting officers to produce their prisoners and justify their arrest), then rounded up up pro-Confederate leaders and threw them in jail in order to keep Maryland in the Union.
Medieval jailers were like prison guards in the medieval times. They had to keep watch on the prisoners and make sure they didn't escape. The jails back then were more relaxed. The jailers would let the prisoners out to beg for money because there was no other way to make money while in jail, but only if they shared part of the profit with the jailer.
President Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus(under which judges can require arresting officers to produce their prisoners and justify their arrest), then rounded up up pro-Confederate leaders and threw them in jail in order to keep Maryland in the Union.
it look like wooden bars and glass frames around it also if people were to get out they would get wiped and forced to foot bind with no healing for the rest of there life and eventually dead because of the pain so dont do it
to keep in the evil
to get her out of jail
* It was permanent. * It was cheap. * It was degrading. * It helped the Nazis keep tabs on prisoners. Obviously, the tattooed numbers were only given to prisoners selected for work. Moreoever, it was used only at the Auschwitz group of camps.
You can't pay to keep someone in jail. It's decided in a court of law.
The police do not keep you in jail, the court does. The court will keep you in jail - or temporarily free on bail - until your "not guilty" status is confirmed by a court. Either the prosecution fails to prove you guilty or prosecutors drop the charges. When the court confirms you are not guilty, you are immediately freed.