English Language & Usage Asked by JaredWolf on April 30, 2021
I’m not sure if it’s an idiom, but I think it’s like a person’s name, that implies ‘proof of guilt’, or ‘evidence to prove one is guilty’. I’ve heard it on many police shows.
"We have her ______, it’s all we need to prove she did it.
It would be a "synonym" for a ‘smoking gun’.
dead to rights
[UK bang to rights]
in the act of doing something wrong or illegal
: "Dead to rights" is seen from the 19th century on, and is used mostly, I believe, as a synonym for red-handed or in the act, or at least with positive evidence of guilt, as in "I caught him dead to rights," According to the OED it can also be used to mean "completely, certainly." [emphasis mine]
"We have her dead to rights, it's all we need to prove she did it.
Correct answer by Cascabel on April 30, 2021
Are you looking for proof positive?
something which definitely shows that something else is true or correct : definite proof
The photograph is proof positive that the accident happened the way he described.
[Merriam-Webster]
Answered by user405662 on April 30, 2021
Consider In flagrante
Also in flagrante delicto1
(Latin: "in blazing offence") or sometimes simply in flagrante (Latin: "in blazing") is a legal term used to indicate that a criminal has been caught in the act of committing an offence (compare corpus delicti). The colloquial "caught red-handed" and "caught rapid" are English equivalents.
*We have her in flagrante, it’s all we need to prove she did it.
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1 Wikipedia
Answered by Jim on April 30, 2021
caught red-handed (or caught in the act), as defined by dictionary.com:
Also, catch in the act. Apprehend someone in the course of wrongdoing, as in The boys were trying to steal a car and the police caught them red-handed, or He tried to cheat on the exam, but his teacher walked in and caught him in the act. The first term referred to blood on a murderer's hands and originally signified only that crime. Later it was extended to any offense. The variant (catch in the act) is a translation of the Latin in flagrante delicto, part of the Roman code and long used in English law.
Answered by auspicious99 on April 30, 2021
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