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Examples
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The size of the most crime-prone population age groups, from late teens through mid-20s, has remained relatively flat in recent years.
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A school system generates many outcomes, not just a less crime-prone populace.
Bill Shireman: How to Cut $100 Billion - Lessons for Politicians Bill Shireman 2011
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A school system generates many outcomes, not just a less crime-prone populace.
Bill Shireman: How to Cut $100 Billion - Lessons for Politicians Bill Shireman 2011
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Brooklyn's East New York neighborhood, traditionally the city's most crime-prone, had the most stops with 5,048.
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In December, reporters gave copious coverage to a single failed robbery attempt of one dispensary located in the city's crime-prone west side.
Jessica Corry: How Anti-Marijuana Romer Can Still Lead America's Most Pro-Pot City 2010
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"In this particular case, it allows US Citizens to keep poorer, more crime-prone, worse-educated Mexicans south of the border through force of arms, thus improving their own quality of life."
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To take special care of the crime-prone and to massively mobilize security personnel are also strategies under the plan.
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In this particular case, it allows US Citizens to keep poorer, more crime-prone, worse-educated Mexicans south of the border through force of arms, thus improving their own quality of life.
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After decades of hearing the poor stereotyped as lazy, stupid, addicted, and crime-prone, they have been discovered to have this singular virtue: They are veritable spending machines.
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Epstein looks at the actual data and finds crime-prone population increased as a share of overall population, and so abortion accounted for zero percent of the 1990s drop in crime.
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