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hue and cry

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal, Idioms, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.10 sec.
hue and cry, formerly, in English law, pursuit of a criminal immediately after he had committed a felony felony (fĕl`ənē), any grave crime, in contrast to a misdemeanor , that is so declared in statute or was so considered in common
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. Whoever witnessed or discovered the crime was required to raise the hue and cry against the perpetrator (e.g., call out "Stop, thief !") and to begin pursuit; all persons within hearing were under the same obligation, and it was a punishable offense not to join in the chase and capture. The perpetrator was promptly brought into court, and if there was evidence of his having been caught red-handed, he was summarily convicted without being allowed to testify in his own behalf. The hue and cry was abolished in the early 19th cent. Possible modern survivals are the obligation to serve on a sheriff's posse and to assist a police officer in pursuing a suspected culprit.

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The hue and cry going off to the Hulks, and people coming thence to examine the iron, Joe's opinion was corroborated.
There will be a hue and cry after you, when you are missed.
He liked Jerry, was glad to be with him and to run with him; but it was Jerry who was ever in the lead, who ever raised the hue and cry of hunting pursuit, who barked indignation and eager yearning at a tree'd squirrel in refuge forty feet above the ground.
 
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