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Proposed Rule 10.1 Mirrors Attorney General Guidelines on Victim Notification Funding
The passage discusses procedural rulemaking for victim notification and a $22 million DOJ appropriation, but offers no concrete leads on wrongdoing, financial misconduct, or high‑level actors beyond g Rule 10.1 would codify victim‑right notices already present in 2005 AG Guidelines. CVRA authorizes a $22 M appropriation over five years for the DOJ Office for Victims of Crime. The text debates sepa
Summary
The passage discusses procedural rulemaking for victim notification and a $22 million DOJ appropriation, but offers no concrete leads on wrongdoing, financial misconduct, or high‑level actors beyond g Rule 10.1 would codify victim‑right notices already present in 2005 AG Guidelines. CVRA authorizes a $22 M appropriation over five years for the DOJ Office for Victims of Crime. The text debates sepa
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Proposed Rule 10.1 Mirrors Attorney General Guidelines on Victim Notification Funding
Proposed Rule 10.1 Mirrors Attorney General Guidelines on Victim Notification Funding The passage discusses procedural rulemaking for victim notification and a $22 million DOJ appropriation, but offers no concrete leads on wrongdoing, financial misconduct, or high‑level actors beyond generic references to the DOJ and Congress. It lacks actionable specifics, novel revelations, or controversial implications. Key insights: Rule 10.1 would codify victim‑right notices already present in 2005 AG Guidelines.; CVRA authorizes a $22 M appropriation over five years for the DOJ Office for Victims of Crime.; The text debates separation‑of‑powers concerns about judicial rulemaking directing executive actions.
Law Review Article Proposes Expansive Victim‑Rights Amendments to Federal Criminal Rules
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