This document is a page from a 2007 Utah Law Review article titled 'The Crime Victims' Rights Movement.' It details the history of the movement, specifically the 1982 President's Task Force on Victims of Crime, which recommended that victims be notified of proceedings and allowed to submit impact statements. The document bears the name of David Schoen (an attorney known for representing Jeffrey Epstein) and a House Oversight Bates stamp, indicating it was submitted as evidence or research in a congressional inquiry, likely regarding the violation of victims' rights in the Epstein case.
| Name | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|
| David Schoen | Attorney / Submitter |
Name appears in footer, suggesting he submitted this document as evidence or part of a legal brief.
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| Paul G. Cassell | Author / Legal Scholar |
Cited multiple times in footnotes regarding victims' rights amendments and criminal procedure.
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| Douglas E. Beloof | Author / Legal Scholar |
Cited in footnotes regarding victims' rights.
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| Steven J. Twist | Author / Legal Scholar |
Cited in footnotes regarding victims' rights amendments.
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| Scalia, J. | Supreme Court Justice |
Cited in footnote 6 (Payne v. Tennessee).
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| Shirley S. Abrahamson | Author |
Cited in footnote 6.
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| Abraham S. Goldstein | Author |
Cited in footnote 6.
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| William T. Pizzi | Author |
Cited in footnote 6.
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| Walter Perron | Author |
Cited in footnote 6.
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| Name | Type | Context |
|---|---|---|
| President's Task Force on Victims of Crime |
Established in 1982, produced a report advocating for victims' rights reforms.
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| Utah Law Review |
Publisher of the article (2007 Utah L. Rev. 861).
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| House Oversight Committee |
Implied by the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017638'.
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| Location | Context |
|---|---|
|
Federal context for Constitutional Amendment discussion.
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Location of Law Review publication.
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"The victims' absence from criminal processes conflicted with 'a public sense of justice keen enough that ... it has found voice in a nationwide 'victims' rights' movement.'"Source
"The system has deprived the innocent, the honest, and the helpless of its protection... . The victims of crime have been transformed into a group oppressively burdened by a system designed to protect them. This oppression must be reddressed."Source
"In its most sweeping recommendation, the Task Force proposed a federal constitutional amendment to protect crime victims' rights 'to be present and to be heard at all critical stages of judicial proceedings.'"Source
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