Forfeiture is the process that a state agency uses to seize (take) property from an owner after someone is arrested, charged, or convicted of a specific crime.
In an equitable and inclusive classroom every student has equal access to learning, is treated equitably by the learning community, and feels valued and supported by their instructor and peers.
Something that is equitable is fair and reasonable in a way that gives equal treatment to everyone. ... equitably adverb ADVERB after verb, ADVERB -ed See full entry for 'equitable' Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's Dictionary.
Equitable sharing is a United States program in which the proceeds of liquidated seized assets from asset forfeiture are shared between state and federal law enforcement authorities.
Treating everyone fairly and in the same way: an equitable tax system. Synonyms. fair (RIGHT) just.
Adjective. characterized by equity or fairness; just and right; fair. equitable treatment of all citizens. Synonyms: unprejudiced, unbiased, objective, impartial, dispassionate, just, fair, evenhanded. Antonyms: prejudiced, biased, inequitable, unequitable, unjust, unfair.
On , Attorney General J. Howard McGrath created the Office of the Deputy Attorney General (ODAG). The Deputy Attorney General (DAG), appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, is the Department of Justice's second-ranking official and functions as a Chief Operating Officer.
Through equitable sharing, any state or local law enforcement agency that directly participates in a law enforcement effort that results in a federal forfeiture may either request to put tangible forfeited property into official use or an equitable share of the net proceeds of the forfeiture.
1 n a type of hand firearm, a pistol; 2 v to shoot. In Scotland, a country whose independence for centuries was only maintained by force of arms, and whose internal history down to the middle of the 18th century was a record of civil wars and family feuds, the possession of arms was a necessity and not a luxury.
The Deputy Attorney General (DAG) Series include the classifications shown in the table below. DAG classifications depend on the number of years of legal experience in the practice of law. All DAG classes, except Graduate Legal Assistants, require active membership in the California State Bar.