Call Number (LC) Title Results
KD7990 .W37 1991 Crime and the computer / 1
KD7990 ǂb G55 2016eb Cybercrime Key Issues and Debates. 1
KD7992 1657 An act for the better suppressing of theft upon the borders of England and Scotland, and for discovery of highway men and other felons. At the Parliament begun at Westminster, the 17th day of September, An. Dom. 1656. 1
KD7992 .E55 At the court at Whitehall, the thirtieth of December 1668 present the Kings Most Excellent Majesty.
At the court at Whitehall, the thirtieth of December 1668 present the Kings Most Excellent Majesty ..
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KD7992 .G74 1820i The debate in the House of Commons, March 26, 1813, upon privately stealing from shops, warehouses, and out-houses 1
KD7992 .S55 1690 A true account of the behaviour, execution, and last dying speeches, of Thomas Kelsey, executed before Newgate on Friday the thirteenth of June, 1690. John Low, Jonathan Hawk, and Thomas Effoll, who were executed at Tyburn on Friday the twentieth of the same instant. 1
KD7992 .S55 1693 A true account of the behaviour, confession, and last dying speech of Capt. James Whitney, who was executed on Wednesday the 1st. of February, 1692. at the Porters block in West Smith-field: being condemned at the sessions last past, for robbing on the highway, &c. 1
KD7993 .T7 1685 A true account of the behaviour, confession, and execution of William Charley and Ann Scot, who received sentence of death on the 27th of August last, at Justice-Hall in the Old-Bayly, and were executed at Tyburn on Friday the 4th of this instant September 1685. : As also a brief account of the seven other persons, who received sentence of death with them, but before execution found mercy in a gracious reprieve, viz. John Thompson, Thomas Draper, Thomas Glanister, Cathrine Baucer, Cassandra Widdows, Ellenor Steel, and Elizabeth Hacker. 1
KD8000 Financial Crime and Corporate Misconduct a Critical Evaluation of Fraud Legislation. 1
KD8000 .B36 2000eb Banks : fraud and crime / 1
KD8000 .H37 1992 Violin fraud : deception, forgery, theft, and the law / 2
KD8000 .H37 1997 Violin fraud : deception, forgery, theft, and lawsuits in England and America / 1
KD8000 .K47 1986 Kerr on the law of fraud and mistake : including misrepresentation generally, undue influence, fiduciary relationship, constructive and imputed notice, etc. 1
KD8000 .T86 2014 Mandating the measurement of fraud legislating against loss / 1
KD8000.Z9 H39 1695 Mr. Hewer's reply to the petition of the Tanger-inhabitants 1
KD8020 .F75 1762 A report of some proceedings on the commission of Oyer and terminer and goal delivery for the trial of the rebels in the year 1746 in the county of Surry, 1
KD8020 .F75 1791 A report of some proceedings on the commission for the trial of the rebels in the year 1746, in the county of Surry; and of other crown cases: to which are added discourses upon a few branches of the crown law: 1
KD8020 .H35 1923i Political crime a critical essay on the law and its administration in cases of a certain type / 1
KD8020 .R87 2020 Treason and rebellion in the British Atlantic, 1685-1800 : legal responses to threatening the state / 1
KD8022 .A22 An Account of the tryal of Charles Bateman, chirurgeon, for high treason in conspiring the death of the late King and the subversion of government, &c., who was tryed and found guilty, at Justice-Hall in the Old Bayly, on the 9th of December, 1685 : the tryals of John Holland and William Davis, for conspiring against, violently assaulting, and without any warrantable cause, imprisoning William Chancey ... who were tryed and found guilty at Justice-Hall in the Old-Bayly, on the 10th of December, 1685 : as also the tryals of John Holland, William Davis, and Agnes Wearing, for a notorious burglary and felony ... who were tryed and found guilty, at Justice-Hall in the Old-Bayly, on the 11th of December, 1685.
An Account of the tryal of Charles Bateman, chirurgeon, for high treason in conspiring the death of the late King and the subversion of government, &c., who was tryed and found guilty, at Justice-Hall in the Old Bayly, on the 9th of December, 1685 : the tryals of John Holland and William Davis, for conspiring against, violently assaulting, and without any warrantable cause, imprisoning William Chancey ... who were tryed and found guilty at Justice-Hall in the Old-Bayly, on the 10th of December, 1685 : as also the tryals of John Holland, William Davis, and Agnes Wearing, for a notorious burglary and felony ... who were tryed and found guilty, at Justice-Hall in the Old-Bayly, on the 11th of December, 1685.
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