| A | B |
| appoint | To designate or select for a position, office, or duty |
| attorney | A person, especially a lawyer, legally appointed to act as agent for another. |
| breach | A violation or an infraction, as of a legal obligation, law, or promise. |
| ceremonial | Of or appropriate to a formal act or set of acts performed in honor or celebration of an occasion, such as a wedding, funeral, or national event. |
| criminal | Of or involving crime. |
| debate | To discuss or present arguments for and against something. |
| detection | The act or process of determining or discovering the presence, existence, or fact of. |
| evidence | The objects, statements, and facts accepted for consideration in a court of law. |
| foreman | A person who chairs and speaks for a jury. |
| forge | To copy or reproduce for fraudulent purposes; counterfeit. |
| inspector | A police officer ranking next below a superintendent. |
| judge | A public official who hears and decides cases in a court of law. |
| podium | An elevated platform, as for a lecturer or an orchestra conductor. |
| subdue | To quiet or bring under control by persuasion or physical force. |
| uncivil | Discourteous; impolite. |