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1.22 MB

Extraction Summary

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Document Information

Type: Legal article / law review excerpt (included in house oversight committee evidence)
File Size: 1.22 MB
Summary

This document is page 103 of a 2014 legal article discussing the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA). The text argues that the CVRA protects victims' rights during the pre-charging phase of a criminal investigation and criticizes the Department of Justice for interpreting the law contrary to this view. The page is stamped as evidence from the House Oversight Committee (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_014082), likely related to investigations into the handling of the Jeffrey Epstein non-prosecution agreement and the violation of victims' rights under the CVRA.

People (2)

Name Role Context
Jeffrey A. Parness Author/Source
Cited in footnote 255 regarding Monetary Recoveries for State Crime Victims
Tobolowsky Author/Source
Cited in footnote 255 describing expansion of victim rights

Organizations (4)

Name Type Context
Congress
Designed the federal law (CVRA) to create rights for victims
Department of Justice
Criticized for a 'contrary interpretation' of the CVRA; urged to embrace the new reality of victim rights
Cleveland State Law Review
Publisher of cited source (58 CLEV. ST. L. REV.)
House Oversight Committee
Source of the document stamp (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_014082)

Key Quotes (4)

"Crime victims have important rights at stake in the criminal justice process, even before prosecutors formally file criminal charges."
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Quote #1
"The Justice Department’s contrary interpretation seems unlikely to prevail when challenged."
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Quote #2
"The CVRA promises victims that they now have the right to confer with prosecutors and the right to be treated fairly while their cases are investigated."
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Quote #3
"It is time for the Department of Justice to recognize and embrace that new reality."
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (1,963 characters)

2014| CRIME VICTIMS’ RIGHTS 103
victims.255 The decision by state legislators to extend notification or conferral rights to crime victims demonstrates an express recognition that crime victims’ meaningful participation in the criminal justice process may involve granting those victims rights before indictment.
CONCLUSION
Crime victims have important rights at stake in the criminal justice process, even before prosecutors formally file criminal charges. It is hardly surprising, therefore, to find that a federal law that Congress in fact designed to create “broad and encompassing” rights for victims protects victims during a criminal investigation. As this Article has explained, interpreting the CVRA to cover crime victims during the pre-charging phase of a case is consistent with the statute’s purposes, text, legislative history, and interpretive case law. And state criminal justice systems also appear to be moving in that direction.
The Justice Department’s contrary interpretation seems unlikely to prevail when challenged. The CVRA signals a paradigm shift in the way that crime victims are to be treated, at least within the federal criminal justice system. Before enactment of the law, federal investigators and prosecutors might have been able to keep victims at arm’s length, refusing to confer with them about the case and otherwise ignoring or even mistreating them during the process. But those days are over. The CVRA promises victims that they now have the right to confer with prosecutors and the right to be treated fairly while their cases are investigated. It is time for the Department of Justice to recognize and embrace that new reality.
255 See Jeffrey A. Parness et al., Monetary Recoveries for State Crime Victims, 58 CLEV. ST. L. REV. 819, 850 (2010); Tobolowsky, supra note 221, at 59 (describing a “significant expansion of victim rights to be consulted by the prosecutor and heard by the court”).
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