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.
Summary
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.
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