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  2. Demand letter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demand_letter

    A demand letter, letter of demand, [1] (of payment), or letter before claim, [2] is a letter stating a legal claim (usually drafted by a lawyer) which makes a demand for restitution or performance of some obligation, owing to the recipients' alleged breach of contract, or for a legal wrong.

  3. Civil recovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_recovery

    Civil recovery is the method in some legal systems employed to recover the proceeds of crime, instead of, or in addition to, criminal court proceedings. [1]Many retailers, or agents acting on their behalf, utilize civil recovery to recover the value of property (including intellectual property) obtained through unlawful conduct (i.e. theft, burglary, larceny, fraud etc.).

  4. Cease and desist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cease_and_desist

    Receiving numerous cease and desist letters may be very costly for the recipient. Each claim in the letters must be evaluated, and it should be decided whether to respond to the letters, "whether or not to obtain an attorney's opinion letter, prepare for a lawsuit, and perhaps initiate [in case of letters regarding a potential patent infringement] a search for alternatives and the development ...

  5. Private Express Statutes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_Express_Statutes

    For example, buying a friend dinner in exchange for having him deliver a letter is not considered without compensation; in such a case one would be required to affix and cancel a sufficient amount of postage to the letter. Another example not falling under this exception would be a business that is carrying letters "free of charge" in the hopes ...

  6. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Working_Group_on_Arbitrary...

    Examples of this can include continued detention after the completion of a sentence, denial of the exercise of fundamental rights such as freedom of expression, violations of the right to a fair trial, asylum and immigration claims, or detention based on ethnicity; religion; sexual orientation, etc. [8]

  7. Demand guarantee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demand_guarantee

    The demand guarantee bridges the "gap of distrust" that exists between the parties. When the bank issues the demand guarantee, the beneficiary deals with a party whose financial strength he can trust and a party which would pay upon first demand regardless of an existing dispute between the parties on the performance of the underlying contract. [5]