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Legislative History of the Crime Victims' Rights Act and Failed Constitutional Amendment (2000‑2004)Case Filekaggle-ho-017641House OversightLegislative History of the Crime Victims' Rights Act and Failed Constitutional Amendment (2000‑2004)
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Legislative History of the Crime Victims' Rights Act and Failed Constitutional Amendment (2000‑2004)
Legislative History of the Crime Victims' Rights Act and Failed Constitutional Amendment (2000‑2004) The passage outlines the procedural timeline of a proposed victims' rights constitutional amendment and its eventual conversion into the Crime Victims' Rights Act. It provides no new allegations, financial flows, or misconduct involving high‑profile actors, merely recounting public legislative actions and statements. While it mentions President Bush, Senators Kyl and Feinstein, and Attorney General Gonzales, there is no indication of wrongdoing or actionable leads. Key insights: Senators Jon Kyl and Dianne Feinstein repeatedly introduced a victims' rights amendment (2000‑2003).; President George W. Bush publicly supported the amendment on April 16, 2002.; The amendment failed to secure the required super‑majority, leading advocates to pursue statutory victims' rights legislation.
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