Friday 25 September 2020

MIREIA STONE RETURNS, THE FAMILY TRAVELS TO HAWAII

Today, The Stones have received some wonderful news. A woman whose description has a match with Mireia Stone has been found near the Mersey River, in an industrial suburb. The family is going to the Police Station to identify her because the police has told them that Mireia does not remember anything.

Until the arrival of the family and the correct identification, Mireia is going to be named Jane Doe, the true name of a person is unknown or is being intentionally concealed.

The Grandma wants to thank all people known and unknown, friends, colleagues, Manchester citizens, security and medical forces who have not giving up in her searching until she has appeared alive.

Lots of people have worked like Jack of all Trades searching Mireia, doing all kind of things, everywhere, all time.

John Doe (for males) and Jane Doe (for females) are multiple-use names that are used when the true name of a person is unknown or is being intentionally concealed.

In the context of law enforcement in the United States, such names are often used to refer to a corpse whose identity is unknown or unconfirmed.

Secondly, such names are also often used to refer to a hypothetical everyman in other contexts, in a manner similar to John Q. Public or Joe Public. There are many variants to the above names, including John Roe, Richard Roe, Jane Roe and Baby Doe, Janie Doe or Johnny Doe (for children).

In other English-speaking countries, unique placeholder names, numbers or codenames have become more often used in the context of police investigations.

This has included the United Kingdom, where usage of John Doe originated during the Middle Ages. However, the legal term John Doe injunction or John Doe order has survived in English law and other legal systems influenced by it.

Other names such as Joe Bloggs or John Smith have sometimes been informally used as placeholders for an everyman in the UK, Australia and New Zealand; such names are seldom used in legal or police circles in the same sense as John Doe.

The name John Doe or John Doo, Richard Roe, along with John Roe, were regularly invoked in English legal instruments to satisfy technical requirements governing standing and jurisdiction, beginning perhaps as early as the reign of England's King Edward III (1327–1377).

Though the rationale behind the choices of Doe and Roe is unknown, there are many suggested folk etymologies. Other fictitious names for a person involved in litigation in medieval English law were John Noakes or Nokes and John-a-Stiles or John Stiles.

The Oxford English Dictionary states that John Doe is the name given to the fictitious lessee of the plaintiff, in the (now obsolete in the UK) mixed action of ejectment, the fictitious defendant being called Richard Roe.

After this event, The Stones have decided to stay a pair of days in Manchester before starting their new trip to Hawaii.

More information: English Club


 A hurricane blows, brings a hard rain
When the blue sky breaks, feels like the world's gonna change
We'll start caring for each other like Jesus said that we might
I'm a Jack of all trades, we'll be alright...
 
Bruce Springsteen

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