Proposed amendment to Rule 32(f) to require victim‑related notice before upward sentencing departures
Summary
The passage discusses a scholarly proposal to change sentencing procedure by mandating notice of victim impact‑statement‑based upward departures. It references circuit splits but does not name any spe Suggests amendment to Rule 32(f) requiring victim’s attorney or prosecutor to raise objections to pr Calls for notice to defense when upward departure arguments rely on victim information. Highlights
This document is from the House Oversight Committee Releases.
View Source CollectionPersons Referenced (4)
“...ictim objections to affect sentencing - with fair notice to the defense. Otherwise, the court - and the defendant - might hear for the first time at sentencing that the prosecution was considering an upward depart...”
Defense Counsel“...encing judge. I would also require either the victim's attorney or the prosecutor to give notice to defense counsel and the court where an upward departure argument might rest on any information provided by the vict...”
The victim“...portant procedural protection to defendants. My proposed amendment to Rule 32(f) would require that the victim's attorney or the prosecutor would raise any reasonable objection to the presentence report before...”
United States“...e split on the need for advance notice of an upward departure based on victim impact statements. In United States v. Dozier, the Tenth Circuit held that a district court is required to give notice to a defendant b...”
Tags
Search 264K+ documents with AI-powered analysis
Extracted Text (OCR)
EFTA DisclosureRelated Documents (6)
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
Scholarly Article Argues Crime Victims' Rights Act Applies Pre‑Charging, Citing Jeffrey Epstein Case
The passage outlines a legal argument that the federal Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) should apply before criminal charges are filed, using the high‑profile Jeffrey Epstein case as an illustration. The DOJ’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) issued a 2011 memo limiting CVRA rights to post‑charging sta Sen. Jon Kyl publicly objected to the OLC memo, asserting CVRA rights attach during investigations
Proposed Rule to Grant Crime Victims Right to Counsel and Voice in Defendant Release Decisions
The passage outlines legislative proposals for victim representation and hearing rights, but it contains no specific allegations, names, transactions, or novel revelations involving high‑profile offic Rule 44.1 would allow courts to appoint volunteer counsel for crime victims, pending congressional a The Criminal Victims Rights Act (CVRA) authorizes funding for victim representation and mandates p
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
Congressional Expansion of Victims' Rights to Access Presentence Reports and Make Sentencing Recommendations
The passage discusses legal interpretations of victims' rights under the CVRA and Sentencing Reform Act, citing case law and Senate reports. It contains no specific allegations, financial flows, or mi Victims may receive presentence reports if a court finds a particularized need. CVRA permits victims to file motions to re‑open sentences only for violations of their right to be h Congressional repo
Forum Discussions
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.