Davis County Inmate Roster

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Davis County Inmate Roster

    county

  • A county is a land area of local government within a country. A county may have cities and towns within its area. Originally, in continental Europe, a county (contea or contado, comte, comtat, condado, Grafschaft, Gau) was the land under the jurisdiction of a count (conte, comte, conde, Graf”).
  • The people of such a territorial division collectively
  • A territorial division of some countries, forming the chief unit of local administration
  • (United States) the largest administrative district within a state; “the county plans to build a new road”
  • (in the US) A political and administrative division of a state, providing certain local governmental services
  • (United Kingdom) a region created by territorial division for the purpose of local government; “the county has a population of 12,345 people”

    inmate

  • A person confined to an institution such as a prison or hospital
  • one of several resident of a dwelling (especially someone confined to a prison or hospital)
  • convict: a person serving a sentence in a jail or prison
  • One of several occupants of a house
  • inpatient: a patient who is residing in the hospital where he is being treated

    roster

  • A list of names, usually for an organization of some kind such as military officers and enlisted personnel enrolled in a particular unit; a muster roll; or a sports team, with the names of players who are eligible to be placed in the lineup for a particular game; A list of the jobs to be done by
  • A list or plan showing turns of duty or leave for individuals or groups in an organization
  • roll: a list of names; “his name was struck off the rolls”
  • A list of members of a team or organization, in particular of athletes available for team selection
  • A roster can be a list of people and the times when they are required to work or a list of students in a classroom.

    davis

  • An academic and agricultural city in north central California, west of Sacramento; pop. 46,209
  • Davys: English navigator who explored the Arctic while searching for the Northwest Passage (1550-1605)
  • United States painter who developed an American version of cubism (1894-1964)
  • United States jazz musician; noted for his trumpet style (1926-1991)

davis county inmate roster

davis county inmate roster – The Diva

The Diva Digs Up the Dirt (A Domestic Diva Mystery)
The Diva Digs Up the Dirt (A Domestic Diva Mystery)
Trouble in spades…

Determined not to be a garden-variety diva, Sophie Winston’s neighbor, Natasha, cultivates a plan to shine on television—using Sophie’s backyard. As the cast and crew of the makeover show Tear It Up With Troy bulldoze through her backyard—and vacation—Sophie retreats to her perennial boyfriend Wolf’s to replace a dead rose bush. But her tender deed goes awry when she digs up a purse belonging to Wolf’s missing wife.

As speculations sprout, Wolf bolts, and then a body crops up in a garden. Is Wolf’s thorny past raising a dead head? This is one case the domestic diva can’t let wither on the vine…

County Sessions House, Islington, Liverpool

County Sessions House, Islington, Liverpool
The County Sessions House was built between 1882 and 1884 to house the Quarter Sessions for the West Derby Hundred of the county of Lancaster. The county’s coat of arms appears in the pediment over the main entrance. Quarter Sessions were courts in which cases involving non-capital offences were tried by magistrates. Until 1877, they were held in Liverpool at the policy court in Basnett Street and at the Kirkdale Sessions House attached to Kirkdale gaol. When the Prison Act of 1877 transferred prisons like Kirkdale from local authority control to the state, a new home had to be found for the Sessions. They were housed temporarily in St George’s hall until the new Sessions House opened in Islington. The magistrates held their first meeting here on Monday 4th August 1884.

The architects of the new building were Messrs. Francis and George Holme, members of an important Liverpool family of builders and railway contractors. Francis Usher Holme (1843/4-1913) trained as an architect in Edinburgh and London, and worked in the office of Sir Charles Barry, designer of the Houses of Parliament, before retuning to Liverpool. He was Surveyor to the County of Lancaster, and in this role he did much work in connection with the design of roads and bridges. In partnership with his uncle George Holme (1822/3-1915) he designed the Conservative Club in Dale Street (built 1882-3, now the Municipal Annexe) and the Homeopathic Hospital in Hope Street (1887, now the Hahnemann Building of John Moores University). In the 1880s and 90s F. & G.Holme regularly exhibited designs for buildings in the annual Liverpool Autumn Exhibitions held at the Walker Art Gallery. These included houses in the Sefton Park area and in West Derby, churches in Crosby and Oxton, the Town Hall in Widnes, and various buildings associated with the Snowdon Railway.

The County Sessions House continues the row of impressive public buildings which line the north side of William Brown Street, dedicated to culture and civic values. In appearance and function these buildings complement St George’s Hall (1841-56, by H. L. Elmes and C. R. Cockerell), with its law courts, concert hall and ambitious scheme of sculptural decoration. The first of the William Brown Street group to be built was the Museum and Library (1857-60, by Thomas Allom and John Weightman), followed by the Walker Art Gallery (1874-7, by Cornelius Sherlock) and the Picton Reading Room (1875-9, also by Sherlock). In contrast to the relatively severe architecture of these earlier buildings, the exterior of the Sessions House is treated more decoratively. There is a good deal of carved ornament (by the architectural sculptors Norbury, Upton and Patterson of Liverpool), stonework of varied colours, and very little plain, unadorned wall surface. In this the Sessions House reflects a general trend in 19th century architecture away from restraint and simplicity towards greater elaboration, taking as its models the buildings of 16th century Italy and France rather than ancient Greece and Rome. However, this elaboration does not extend beyond the main facade. As with all the William Brown Street buildings, the Sessions House was designed to be seen from the front. The back and the less visible parts of the sides are treated in a much more utilitarian way and are built largely of brick.

Compared with the regular, symmetrical facade, the internal planning is extraordinarily complex and irregular. This complexity was dictated by the building’s original function. Magistrates and barristers came in by the front door, solicitors and witnesses entered through a side door in Mill Lane, prisoners were delivered to the cells through a gate on the east side, and members of the public who came to watch the proceedings had their own entrance at the back. Once inside, the arrangement of stairs and corridors was ingeniously designed to ensure that these four categories of user did not have to meet until they confronted each other in one of the courtrooms. Today’s visitor exploring the whole building may find the interior a confusing maze, but its original users would probably have had no need to venture beyond their own clearly defined area. The complicated subdivision into many small offices, not all of them adjacent to external walls, made it difficult for the architects to admit natural light to every part of the building. They overcame this problem with considerable ingenuity through the use of roof lights, glazed doors and wrought iron grilles.

Floor by floor, the Sessions House contains the following accommodation: the basement is entirely occupied by cells; the ground floor – the most altered part of the building – originally had further cells, accommodation for solicitors and witnesses, and a summary court (now converted into a lecture theatre); the first floor contains two court rooms and accommodation for magistrates, barristers and jurors; the top floor has a room for the Grand Jury, a dining room and a car

County Jail

County Jail
Historic county jail in Sonora, Texas, USA.

davis county inmate roster

Vanity, Vengeance And A Weekend In Vegas: A Sophie Katz Mystery
Sophie Katz, bestselling mystery writer and amateur sleuth, has just discovered that Anatoly, her sexy Russian P.I boyfriend of six years is actually married to the daughter of a Russian mafia boss. Devastated by his betrayal, Sophie banishes him from their beautiful San Francisco Victorian home. Desperate to distract their friend and pull her out of her depression, Dena and Marcus spirit Sophie away to Vegas for a “fun filled weekend” at a Sex Toy Trade Show. But bigger trouble awaits in Vegas. Anatoly is there; his beautiful Russian wife is there; and so is a dead body stuffed into a closet. And to make matters worse someone has gone out of their way to implicate Sophie in the murder. Sophie’s completely over her head and when a mysterious man offers her help she’s tempted to take it. But who is he and whose side is he on? It’s also clear that whoever the bad guy is he would have no problem killing Anatoly, and although she may want to kill him herself, no one else is going to hurt Sophie’s man.