HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017715.jpg

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Extraction Summary

21
People
6
Organizations
1
Locations
1
Events
3
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal article / law review (discovery production)
File Size: 2.05 MB
Summary

This document is the first page of a 2005 law review article by Paul G. Cassell titled 'Recognizing Victims in the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure'. It discusses the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) of 2004 and proposes amendments to federal rules to better integrate victims into criminal proceedings. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp and the name 'DAVID SCHOEN' in the footer, suggesting it is part of a production related to congressional oversight, likely involving the Epstein case where the CVRA was a central legal issue.

People (21)

Name Role Context
Paul G. Cassell Author
Professor of Law (S.J. Quinney College of Law) and U.S. District Court Judge for the District of Utah.
David Schoen Footer Name
Name appears at the bottom of the page, likely indicating the individual associated with this file production (lawyer).
Doug Beloof Acknowledged Individual
Thanked by the author.
Janna Tucker Davis Acknowledged Individual
Thanked by the author.
Meg Garvin Acknowledged Individual
Thanked by the author.
Wendy Murphy Acknowledged Individual
Thanked by the author.
James Orenstein Judge
Judge thanked by the author.
Steve Twist Acknowledged Individual/Author
Thanked by the author; also cited in footnote 2 as author of a related article.
Ann Bauer Law Clerk
Law clerk to Paul G. Cassell.
Tim Conde Law Clerk
Law clerk to Paul G. Cassell.
Tyler Green Law Clerk
Law clerk to Paul G. Cassell.
Felise Thorpe Moll Law Clerk
Law clerk to Paul G. Cassell.
Justin Starr Law Clerk
Law clerk to Paul G. Cassell.
Stewart Young Law Clerk
Law clerk to Paul G. Cassell.
Trish Spouse
Wife of Paul G. Cassell.
George W. Bush President
Mentioned as 'President Bush' signing the CVRA into law.
Scott Campbell Victim/Namesake
Namesake of the CVRA.
Stephanie Roper Victim/Namesake
Namesake of the CVRA.
Wendy Preston Victim/Namesake
Namesake of the CVRA.
Louarna Gillis Victim/Namesake
Namesake of the CVRA.
Nila Lynn Victim/Namesake
Namesake of the CVRA.

Organizations (6)

Name Type Context
S.J. Quinney College of Law
University of Utah
University of Utah
Academic institution
United States District Court for the District of Utah
Judicial body
Congress
Legislative body passed the CVRA
BYU Law Review
Publisher (B.Y.U.L. Rev.)
House Oversight Committee
Implied by Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT

Timeline (1 events)

October 2004
Passage and signing of the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA)
USA
Congress President Bush

Locations (1)

Location Context
Location of the University and District Court mentioned in author bio.

Relationships (3)

Paul G. Cassell Spousal Trish
especially to my wife Trish for all her support
Paul G. Cassell Professional (Clerkship) Ann Bauer
to my able law clerks Ann Bauer...
Paul G. Cassell Professional/Academic Steve Twist
Thanks to... Steve Twist; Cites Twist's article in footnote 2

Key Quotes (3)

"Crime victims are virtually absent from the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017715.jpg
Quote #1
"The CVRA transforms crime victims into participants in the criminal justice process by (among other things) guaranteeing them notice of court hearings, the right to attend those hearings, and the opportunity to testify at appropriate points in the process."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017715.jpg
Quote #2
"I write this article as a law professor, not as a judge."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017715.jpg
Quote #3

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