相关例句
2.A person appointed by a court administrator to take into custody the property or funds of others, pending litigation.
4.To worry or to bother someone, especially by continually checking on him or take him into custody.
5.If you resist, their job will be to “take you into custody” - which is a euphemism for seizing you, handcuffing you, and taking you to jail against your will.
6.It explicitly stipulates that "the longest time for summons and summons for detention shall not exceed 12 hours”, and that “it is forbidden to take criminal suspects into custody in disguised forms through continuous summons or summons for detention".

