1) "For if I be an offender," (ei men oun adiko) "if I therefore do wrong," am found to do wrong, to be a malicious law-breaker, of Roman or Jewish law.
2) "Or have committed any thing " (pepracha ti) "Or I have practiced anything," repeatedly done anything, with deliberate intent and purpose, even subject to death under my nation’s religious laws, Exodus 20:1-17.
3) "Worthy of death," (kai aksion thanatou) "Ever worthy of death," any crime of capital punishment nature, worthy of death, or that merits death. And he had not, a matter confirmed by both Festus and Agrippa, Acts 25:25; Acts 26:30-32.
4) “I refuse not to die:” (ou paraitoumai to apothanein) "I do not refuse (will not draw back) to die;" or beg off. A Roman is willing to die, a Christian is ready to die. This shows his patriotism, his preparation for a better abode with Christ, 2 Corinthians 5:1-9.
5) "But if there be none of these thing " (ei de ouden estin hon houtoi) "Yet, if there exists not a single thing," not even one factual thing, Acts 23:29-30.
6) "Whereof these accuse me," (kategorusin) "Of which they accuse me," repeatedly, hashing the same things over and over, as generalization charges, submitting no evidentiary material of his actual guilt, Acts 24:5-9.
7) "No man may deliver me unto them," (oudeis me’ dunati autois charisasthai) "There is no one who can grant me to them," who can turn me over to them, based on Roman law, Acts 26:32.
8) "I appeal unto Caesar." (Kaisara epikaloumai) "So I appeal to Caesar," to his jurisdiction alone over me, Acts 28:19-21. By this appeal the Jews were robbed-of their prey, Acts 21:32; Acts 23:27.