Seeing a judge and requesting a release.
Habeaus corpus allows a person to request the right to see judge and request release from prison. Essentially in America it give a person protection under the Fifth and Sixth Amendments.
In the case described above, enemies of war had historically not be granted the rights of habeaus corpus and/or the protection of the Fifth and Sixth Amendments. In recent years, the view has changed with humanitarian rights organizations suggesting that any person arrested under the US system should be provided the US rights for imprisonment, trial, and court. This suggests that even enemies of the state must be allowed an opportunity to see a judge or go through court proceedings.
Answer:
all of these statements look correct besides the third one
Explanation:
Hello there! World war 1 was a hell of a war that led to many technological innovations at the cost of human suffering on a level never seen before. The trenches that were littered throughout western Europe were primarily designed for defense against enemy advances, artillery bombardments, and machine gun fire. Attacks on trenches were particularly deadly due to the use of newly developed machine guns, barbed wire, and CQC (Close quarters combat). It is arguable that the invention of the first tank by the British, gas attacks by the Germans, and devastatingly effective shotguns by the Americans could be seen as a technology that helped men overtake trenches, but they hardly did. Overall, all of these statements look correct besides the third one.
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Answer: The death toll was 4,000 to 5,000, in a population of 50,000. Yellow fever outbreaks recurred in Philadelphia and other major ports through the nineteenth century, but none had as many fatalities as that of 1793. The 1798 epidemic in Philadelphia also prompted an exodus; an estimated 1,292 residents died.
The answers are A,D,E for B is backwards and C is plainly false they had a strong Empire <span />