A LexisNexis docket report for the US Court of Appeals case 21-58, United States of America v. Maxwell, retrieved on April 14, 2021. The document lists proceedings from April 9 to April 13, 2021, including notices of appearance for Ghislaine Maxwell and motions to seal documents filed by the United States government (Appellee), which were subsequently granted.
This document is an internal email chain among US Attorney's Office (Southern District of NY) staff celebrating a court order from the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals on April 27, 2021. The court denied Ghislaine Maxwell's motion for bail (Case 21-58). The emails convey congratulations to a redacted team member for their work on the appeal.
This document is page 55 (PDF page 70) of a legal brief filed on February 28, 2023, in Case 22-1426. The text presents a legal argument regarding the 'Landgraf test' and statutory interpretation, specifically arguing that the Child Abduction Prevention Act of 2003 (H.R. 1104) was not intended to apply retroactively because Congress explicitly rejected a proviso that would have allowed it to cover conduct predating the enactment. The page relies on various Supreme Court and Circuit Court citations to support the argument that rejected legislative proposals are significant indicators of congressional intent.
This document is a 'Table of Authorities' page (page ii) from a legal filing, likely a brief or motion. It lists various legal precedents (case law) primarily focused on media, public access to court records, and sealing orders (e.g., NY Times v. US, Globe Newspaper v. Superior Court). Crucially, it cites 'People v. Epstein' (2011) as a key authority used 'passim' (throughout) the main document, suggesting the filing relates to the legal proceedings involving Jeffrey Epstein, possibly regarding the unsealing of records. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was part of a Congressional investigation.
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