pro bonoin a sentence
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Judge Sims had appointed a young attorney for Miss Clark, since she had taken no action to do so herself, but when Tom Milton heard of this, he came out of retirement and requested to represent her pro bono.
(source)
pro bono = without charge (for free)
- Pro bono, in fact.† (source)
- He did largely pro bono work.† (source)
- Lori Andrews, who has worked pro bono on all of the most important biological ownership cases to date, including the current breast cancer gene suit, says that many scientists have interfered with science in precisely the way courts always worried tissue donors might do.† (source)
- I interviewed Carlos Martan Ramarez, a doctor who treats migrants pro bono for the priest.† (source)
- The firm took it pro bono — neither of the accused had any money, of course — and as I was the youngest, it ended up with me; and at the last minute, too, with scarcely a month to prepare.† (source)
- I'll tell her you're a friend of mine and she'll do it pro bono.† (source)
- Once a male friend came to visit me; a tall, curly-headed lawyer, he had been consulting with a pro bono client at a nearby men's prison, so he decided to stop by on his way home.† (source)
- But, since you ask, we've spent roughly 250,000 kronor on pro bono work in the past few months."† (source)
- The firm encourages its employees to spend 10% of their time on pro bono work.
- I would like to add for the record that I am doing this on a pro bono basis ….† (source)
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- Someone that has nothing better to do ought to write a letter pro bono publico to the papers about the muzzling order for a dog the like of that.† (source)
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