Which preposition to use with crime

of Occurrences 786%

Then the heavens became darker and darker, and I thought that the sun had suddenly withdrawn and night had surely returned, as it had erstwhile returned to the Greeks because of the crime of Atrcus.

in Occurrences 262%

if he sought to fly, and, if he paused, interviewed him in a magisterial manner, and almost tearfully implored him to Confess his crime in time for the Next Edition.

against Occurrences 168%

Surely they dare not commit such a monstrous crime against the absent, the undefended!"

for Occurrences 88%

The crime for which this wretched man was hung is still fresh in our memories.

as Occurrences 57%

They were emphatic among their friends on the degeneracy of these days which rendered possible such an outrageous crime as the murder of a High Court judge.

with Occurrences 53%

The crimes with which it has been charged, the crimes of which it has been guilty, are small in amount, compared with the good it has effected.

to Occurrences 53%

Whatto possess thee when the Bliss was offer'd? Possess thee too without a Crime to thee?

by Occurrences 51%

Had its mission been to serve as a blanket to this crime by wiping out from the old snow all tell-tale footsteps and such other records as simplify cases of this kind for the detectives, it could not have happened more apropos to the event.

on Occurrences 46%

No great crime on the face of it; but a constant suppression of a very small truth is as burdensome as any suggestion of falsehood.

at Occurrences 28%

His crime at Minden was set down by the thoughtless public to sheer cowardice.

than Occurrences 26%

They were, therefore, equally dangerous to those that obeyed the act, and to those that disregarded it; for they sometimes put their threats in execution, and raised prosecutions against those who had committed no other crime than that of refusing to bribe them to silence.

from Occurrences 21%

Yes, you are right, we need not hunt for motives: There is no crime from which this man would shrink; He recks not human law; and I have noticed That often when the name of God is uttered, A sudden blankness overspreads his face.

among Occurrences 21%

His big brothers kicked him about, his father was at work from morning till evening, and the child, thus morally a waif, grew up out of doors for a career of vice and crime among the swarms of lads and girls of his age, who all rotted there together like apples fallen on the ground.

like Occurrences 15%

Could anything be more improbable than to suppose that a man of the accused's training, intellect, and force of character, would be swayed by a gust of passion into committing such a dreadful crime like an immature ignorant youth of unbalanced temperament?

into Occurrences 14%

" "With what end was this miserable falsehood invented?" "Father, I was applied to as a public Bravo, and my reports, in more ways than one, answered their designs, That I saved some lives is at least a consolation for the error or crime into which I fell!"

within Occurrences 9%

In all these foul treacheries and crimes within his own household may be seen the distinct fulfilment of the punishment foretold by Nathan the prophet, as prepared for David's own "great transgression."

under Occurrences 5%

What man is safe?" "It occurs to me," continued Mr. Magnus thoughtfully, "that it is a crime under the law to build a house on another man's land; now I should say that there was a close analogy between doing that and sleeping in his bed.

without Occurrences 4%

It is pretended, and was generally believed, that the Duke of Gloucester killed him with his own hands; but the universal odium which that Prince had incurred, perhaps inclined the nation to aggravate his crimes without any sufficient authority.

after Occurrences 4%

Or he may decide to commit a crime after due premeditation and preparation, and in that case the penalty is powerless to check him, because he hopes to escape with impunity.

amongst Occurrences 4%

Hence it is that extravagance leads not only to impoverishment but also to crime; and crime amongst the moneyed classes is almost always the result of extravagance.

beyond Occurrences 3%

not the depth Of this Man's crimes beyond the reach of thought?

out Occurrences 3%

But, my lords, this is not the only difference between the two cases; for he that discovers a bribe received by himself, has no motives of interest to prompt his evidence; he is only secured from suffering by his own discovery, and might have been equally safe by silence and secrecy; since the law supposes the crime out of the reach of detection, otherwise than by the confession of the criminal.

during Occurrences 2%

The first and most important document, and indeed of itself sufficient to save the trouble of giving more, is the comparison of crime during two and a half months of freedom, and the corresponding two and a half months of slavery or apprenticeship last year, submitted to the legislature at the opening of its session in the latter part of October.

about Occurrences 2%

Doubtless the memory of the other crime, the first one, the monstrous buried crime about which they both kept silence, returned at that horrible moment and shone out disturbingly in his eyes, for she herself shuddered as if she could see it there, while with the view of mastering him she gazed at him fixedly.

en Occurrences 2%

Un crime en Hollande.

Which preposition to use with  crime