Citations:get out of jail free card

English citations of get out of jail free card

  • Madden, Chris (2012 February 12) “Detroit Pistons: Amnesty Clause Predictions for the 2012 Offseason”, in (Please provide the book title or journal name)[1], Bleacher Report, retrieved 2012-02-21
    When the lockout finally ended, the big buzz going around the NBA was regarding the amnesty clause. The league's version of a get-out-of-jail-free card was going to be a godsend for the Detroit Pistons and many other teams because it offered a painless way to rid themselves of lousy contracts.
  • Gold, Sam (2012 February 21) “Meaningful Legislation That Saw The Round File”, in (Please provide the book title or journal name)[2], California Progress Report, retrieved 2012-02-21
    As long as insurance companies have their “Get Out Of Jail Free” card in the form of the “Exclusive Remedy” doctrine and “Litigation Privilege”, they will do everything in their power to violate the rights of the injured worker with impunity.
  • Course Technology (2010) Penetration Testing Procedures and Methodologies[3] (computers), pages 2-6:
    A "Get Out of Jail Free Card" is a legal agreement signed by an authorized representative of an organization that indemnifies the tester against any loss or damages that may result from the testing. In other words, a "Get Out of Jail Free Card" is a letter from the company to a penetration tester giving legal authority to test the network and stating legal release from inadvertent damages caused to the network during the test. For this reason, it is called a "Get Out of Jail Free Card."