Citations:murder


 * 1678 — John Bunyan. The Pilgrim's Progress.
 * Indeed, our present condition is dreadful, and death would be far more welcome to me than thus for ever to abide; but yet, let us consider, the Lord of the country to which we are going hath said, Thou shalt do no murder: no, not to another man's person; much more, then, are we forbidden to take his counsel to kill ourselves.
 * Besides, he that kills another, can but commit murder upon his body; but for one to kill himself is to kill body and soul at once.
 * 1996, Tina Rosenberg, The Haunted Land: Facing Europe's Ghosts After Communism ISBN 0679744991, page 335:
 * On October 26, 1993, Mielke was found guilty of murder and sentenced to six years in prison. Trying Mielke for the 1931 murders had not been the prosecutors' original idea.
 * 2008, Lavinia Stan, Transitional Justice in Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union ISBN 0415776716, page 26:
 * On 26 October 1993, the Berlin Regional Court sentenced the 85-year-old Erich Mielke, leader of East Germany's Ministry for State Security from 1957 to 1989, to six years in prison for murder in two cases.
 * 2012, Brian Righi, Vampires Through the Ages ISBN 0738726486:
 * The trial that followed became a sensation across Germany, and on December 19, 1924, Fritz Haarmann was convicted of twenty-four separate counts of murder and sentenced to death.
 * 2012, Brian Righi, Vampires Through the Ages ISBN 0738726486:
 * The trial that followed became a sensation across Germany, and on December 19, 1924, Fritz Haarmann was convicted of twenty-four separate counts of murder and sentenced to death.