in cases referred by the inspector-general

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GoodTaste

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If there were particularly referred by the inspector-general, then I don't understand why "the" is omitted in "in (the) cases". Is "in the cases" wrong? Why?

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Exclusive: US National Science Foundation reveals first details on foreign-influence investigations
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“We’re only starting to understand these issues,” says Keiser, who was appointed in March to tackle foreign interference. All but two of the cases involved ties to China,although a majority of the scientists in cases referred by the inspector-general are US citizens and are not ethnically Chinese.

Source: Nature 07 JULY 2020
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-02051-8
 

tedmc

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I think the definite article is optional especially when there are many cases.
 

PeterCW

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I can't give my feeling any justification in grammar but as a speaker of colloquial BrE I would infer that there were cases referred from other sources if the definite article was added. Without the article the inference is that the inspector-general is the only source of referrals.
 
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