We shall never cast out the devil while conniving at his crimes.
2
The mixed-up bedrooms, the cuckolded husband, the conniving slave -thosethey understood.
3
Police colleagues arrested him in 2017 after years of betrayal and conniving abuse.
4
But the more conniving criminal element sinks further out of sight.
5
In these pictures, Klaudia didn't look slutty or conniving-sheseemed normal.
1
Mr. Hunt now considered the whole conduct of M'Dougal hollow and collusive.
2
The plaintiffs said the evidence showed the new defendants engaged in collusive price manipulation.
3
In the back-ground are two collusive associates, eagerly dividing the profits of the evening.
4
Multiple parties have objected to the shareholder settlement, including Hussain, who called it collusive.
5
The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages, triple damages, and a halt to alleged collusive conduct.
6
Establishing a reputation for collusive predatory pricing deters potential entrants.
7
Therefore, the question of mutual monitoring and control is a key issue in collusive oligopolies.
8
That's because competitors rarely commit collusive agreements to writing.
9
First, he pointed out that he's determined not to be a rubber stamp for collusive settlements.
10
Lu questioned how regulators would monitor these groups to prevent anti-competitive and collusive behavior including rate fixing.
11
Any officer making a collusive seizure or other fraud was to forfeit 500 pounds and his office.
12
Holder said that parts company executives typically met face to face or talked via telephone to reach collusive agreements.
13
The Radia tapes highlight another: sleaze and collusive business-politics relations that mock transparency, accountability, democratic policy-making and the public interest.
14
Vestager said the size of the total penalty reflected the large market involved and the long duration of the collusive behaviour.
15
But some of it is also attributable to business's own behaviour including collusive conduct in certain industries and inflated executive compensation.
16
The newspapers are for a fortnight filled with puffs of all the various kinds which Sheridan enumerated, direct, oblique, and collusive.