1 duplicate copy in the archive
Proposed Rule Amendment to Restrict Victim Subpoenas Citing Elizabeth Smart Case
The passage outlines a proposed procedural rule change to protect crime victims' confidential information and cites the Elizabeth Smart kidnapping case as an example. While it raises a legitimate priv Proposes Rule 17(c)(3) requiring court finding of specificity, relevance, and admissibility before v Calls for victim notice and ability to quash oppressive subpoenas. Cites the Utah case where Eliza
Summary
The passage outlines a proposed procedural rule change to protect crime victims' confidential information and cites the Elizabeth Smart kidnapping case as an example. While it raises a legitimate priv Proposes Rule 17(c)(3) requiring court finding of specificity, relevance, and admissibility before v Calls for victim notice and ability to quash oppressive subpoenas. Cites the Utah case where Eliza
Tags
Ask AI About This Document
Extracted Text (OCR)
Related Documents (6)
Law review article proposes extensive amendments to Federal Criminal Rules to implement Crime Victims' Rights Act
Law review article proposes extensive amendments to Federal Criminal Rules to implement Crime Victims' Rights Act The document outlines policy proposals for rule changes but contains no concrete allegations, financial flows, or misconduct involving specific powerful actors. It is a scholarly discussion, offering limited investigative value. Key insights: Identifies gaps in current Federal Rules where victims are barely mentioned.; Cites legislative history of the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) and related statutes.; Proposes specific rule amendments (e.g., Rule 1 definition of victim, new Rule 10.1 notice, Rule 43.1 victim attendance).
Law Review Article Proposes Expansive Victim‑Rights Amendments to Federal Criminal Rules
Law Review Article Proposes Expansive Victim‑Rights Amendments to Federal Criminal Rules The document is an academic commentary urging broader implementation of the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) in the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. It discusses legislative history, proposed rule changes, and critiques of the Advisory Committee's limited proposals. While it references high‑level officials (Senators Jon Kyl, Dianne Feinstein, etc.) and suggests legislative action, it contains no concrete allegations of wrongdoing, financial flows, or misconduct by influential actors. The content is largely policy analysis rather than a lead for investigative follow‑up. Key insights: Calls for the Advisory Committee to adopt broader victim‑fairness language in Rules 2, 11, 12, 15, 32, 60, etc.; Highlights Senate statements (Kyl, Feinstein) emphasizing victims' rights and fairness.; Notes that the Advisory Committee’s proposals are narrower than the CVRA’s statutory language.
Law review article proposes extensive amendments to Federal Criminal Rules to implement Crime Victims' Rights Act
The document outlines policy proposals for rule changes but contains no concrete allegations, financial flows, or misconduct involving specific powerful actors. It is a scholarly discussion, offering Identifies gaps in current Federal Rules where victims are barely mentioned. Cites legislative history of the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) and related statutes. Proposes specific rule amendments
Law Review Article Proposes Expansive Victim‑Rights Amendments to Federal Criminal Rules
The document is an academic commentary urging broader implementation of the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) in the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. It discusses legislative history, proposed rule Calls for the Advisory Committee to adopt broader victim‑fairness language in Rules 2, 11, 12, 15, 3 Highlights Senate statements (Kyl, Feinstein) emphasizing victims' rights and fairness. Notes that
Proposed Rule Amendment to Restrict Victim Subpoenas Citing Elizabeth Smart Case
Proposed Rule Amendment to Restrict Victim Subpoenas Citing Elizabeth Smart Case The passage outlines a proposed procedural rule change to protect crime victims' confidential information and cites the Elizabeth Smart kidnapping case as an example. While it raises a legitimate privacy concern, it does not identify concrete financial flows, wrongdoing by high‑level officials, or actionable leads involving powerful actors. The lead is limited to a policy discussion with no specific names beyond the victim and her attorney, thus offering low investigative value. Key insights: Proposes Rule 17(c)(3) requiring court finding of specificity, relevance, and admissibility before victim info can be subpoenaed.; Calls for victim notice and ability to quash oppressive subpoenas.; Cites the Utah case where Elizabeth Smart's school records were obtained by defense without family notice.
Deep Thinking – collection of essays by AI thought leaders
Deep Thinking – collection of essays by AI thought leaders The document is a largely philosophical and historical overview of AI research, its thinkers, and societal implications. It contains no concrete allegations, financial transactions, or novel claims that point to actionable investigative leads involving influential actors. The content is primarily a synthesis of known public positions and historical anecdotes, offering limited new information for investigative follow‑up. Key insights: Highlights concerns about AI risk and alignment voiced by prominent researchers (e.g., Stuart Russell, Max Tegmark, Jaan Tallinn).; Notes the growing corporate influence on AI development (e.g., references to Google, Microsoft, Amazon, DeepMind).; Mentions historical episodes where AI research intersected with military funding and government secrecy.
Forum Discussions
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,500+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.