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DOJ Letter to House Judiciary Chair Opposing H.R. 3887 Trafficking Bill
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kaggle-ho-012372House Oversight

DOJ Letter to House Judiciary Chair Opposing H.R. 3887 Trafficking Bill

DOJ Letter to House Judiciary Chair Opposing H.R. 3887 Trafficking Bill The document is a routine inter‑agency correspondence expressing policy objections to proposed legislation. It mentions only departmental officials and a congressman, without revealing new facts, financial flows, or misconduct. The lead is low‑value for investigative work. Key insights: DOJ objects to sections 102 and 103 of H.R. 3887, citing concerns over victim interview protocols and duplication of effort.; The letter urges that the State Department’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons obtain Attorney General consent before interviewing victims in ongoing investigations.; DOJ warns that statements obtained by the State Director could be compelled to be turned over to defense counsel, potentially jeopardizing prosecutions.

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Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-012372
Pages
1
Persons
0
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Summary

DOJ Letter to House Judiciary Chair Opposing H.R. 3887 Trafficking Bill The document is a routine inter‑agency correspondence expressing policy objections to proposed legislation. It mentions only departmental officials and a congressman, without revealing new facts, financial flows, or misconduct. The lead is low‑value for investigative work. Key insights: DOJ objects to sections 102 and 103 of H.R. 3887, citing concerns over victim interview protocols and duplication of effort.; The letter urges that the State Department’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons obtain Attorney General consent before interviewing victims in ongoing investigations.; DOJ warns that statements obtained by the State Director could be compelled to be turned over to defense counsel, potentially jeopardizing prosecutions.

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kagglehouse-oversightlegislationhuman-traffickingdojcongresspolicy-opposition
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