This document is a page from a legal publication (Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology) submitted to the House Oversight Committee by attorney David Schoen. It analyzes state laws (specifically Hawaii, Colorado, Missouri, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Idaho) regarding crime victims' rights to notification and consultation prior to the filing of formal charges or plea agreements. The text serves as legal precedent or comparative analysis, likely relevant to arguments concerning the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) in the context of the Epstein case.
This document appears to be a page from a legal text or law review article (dated 2014) included in a House Oversight Committee production regarding the Epstein investigation. The text analyzes Crime Victims' Rights, specifically contrasting the 'limited definition' of a 'case' advocated by 'the Department' (likely DOJ) against the broader protections found in Arizona and Hawaii state laws. It argues that in these states, victims' rights to notification and consultation attach before formal charges are filed, based on probable cause or arrest.
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