I've played many criminals, but I loved playing somebody on the right side of the law who had a family and who had ethics.


Criminals were coming to Chechnya from all over the world - they did not have a place in their own countries. But they could live perfectly well in Chechnya.

I'm not sure why, but I seem to be drawn to stories about abuses of power. But I'm also drawn, not so much to victims' stories, as stories that tend to show how power works. Because if you don't understand the criminals, you can't figure out how to stop the crimes.

I never took that stuff personally when people said I was too young, too inexperienced. I get politics. I get attack ads. But they said 'mobbed up family.' That we were criminals. That kills me.

The pillory and stocks, the gibbet, and even the whipping-post, have seen many a noble victim, many a martyr. But I cannot think any save the most ignoble criminals ever sat in a ducking-stool.

Be in no doubt: we are completely committed to make sure we support young people with the additional resources that are necessary to give them the alternatives to the offer that's put forward by the terrible criminals on the streets.

I don't need to understand how encryption works to understand how it's helping the criminals.

No one disagrees that undocumented criminals should be deported.

To confront criminals, we need to finish with corruption. If we don't do this, there is no hope.

With sad, depressing predictability, the children of today's underclass become tomorrow's criminals and dropouts.