incriminating in the PONS Dictionary

incriminating Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
The processpractised in other colonies as welldeliberately sought to remove incriminating evidence.
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Affiliation with the jazz culture was damaging whenever other incriminating information could be factored into a formula for persecution.
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Another tactic of stonewalling is providing the jurors with misleading information or purposefully withholding certain pieces of information that can be self incriminating.
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An underboss likely has incriminating information about the boss, and so bosses often appoint people close to them to the underboss position for protection.
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Examples of digital evidence are: incriminating e-mails, log traces to find whereabouts, web cameras, pictures or videos stored in a computer.
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It was after the police found this hideout that incriminating evidence would lead to the eventual arrest and conviction of most of the gang.
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The media, including newspapers in the city, discovered that the man was coerced into eventually incriminating himself for the acts, and he was acquitted.
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Initially, they did not find any incriminating evidence, but after further searching, three bodies of young men were discovered in a nearby barn.
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The reports were incriminating and proclaimed that the local police failed in their duty to respond to complaints over the past two years.
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It is the conscious failure to release incriminating information by a third party.
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