This page from a legal filing (Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN, United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell) argues against the defendant's bail release by highlighting the risk of non-extradition. The Government asserts that France does not extradite its citizens (citing the 'Peterson' case) and that any anticipatory waiver of extradition to the UK provided by the defendant is unenforceable under the UK Extradition Act of 2003.
This document is page 18 of a government filing (Document 102) from June 18, 2020, in the case of United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell (Case 1:20-cr-00330). The text argues against bail by highlighting flight risks, specifically noting that France does not extradite its own citizens (citing the 'Peterson' case) and arguing that any 'anticipatory waiver' of extradition the defendant might sign regarding the United Kingdom is legally unenforceable under UK law (referencing the Extradition Act of 2003 and U.S. v. Stanton). The prosecution asserts that such waivers are meaningless until a defendant is physically present before a British judge.
This page from a book titled "How America Lost Its Secrets" details the logistics of how NSA documents stolen by Edward Snowden were transported between journalists Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras via David Miranda, leading to the NSA obtaining a copy during Miranda's detention at Heathrow. It further analyzes the timeline of Snowden's theft, noting that he downloaded documents for nine months before acquiring the specific whistle-blowing materials (like the Verizon order and PRISM presentation) released to the media, suggesting his initial motives may have differed from his public claims.
This document appears to be page 21 of a memoir draft (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the 'Uncle Itchie' reference) produced for the House Oversight Committee. It details the author's childhood upbringing, focusing on the strict adherence to rules and debts rather than theological belief, illustrated by stories of his uncle paying back fares after stowing away and his grandmother enforcing Jewish blessings and kosher laws.
This document appears to be page 299 of an academic text titled 'Morality Games,' likely included in evidence files. It discusses the moral philosophy of omission versus commission, using the historical tragedy of the ship *Struma* (1942) as an example. The text further explores this distinction using game theory models (Nash equilibria, Coordination Game) based on research by DeScioli, Bruening, and Kurzban.
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