June 28, 2004
United States v. Bodmer decision
| Name | Type | Mentions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bodmer | person | 34 | View Entity |
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This document is page 31 of a court filing (Document 100) from December 18, 2020, in the case of United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell (Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN). The text presents a legal argument supporting the detention of the defendant by distinguishing her case from previous instances where bail was granted (Khashoggi, Bodmer) and comparing her to cases where detention was upheld due to flight risk and foreign ties (Boustani, Patrick Ho). Notably, it cites a 2001 case, 'United States v. Epstein,' as precedent for denying bail based on dual citizenship and lack of extradition treaties; however, this 2001 citation likely refers to a different defendant named Epstein (in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania) rather than Jeffrey Epstein.
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Discussion of the legal case 'U.S. v. Bodmer'
Date unknown
The case of United States v. Bodmer, where the defendant was released to home confinement with GPS monitoring despite the government's argument based on speculation.
2004-01-28 • S.D.N.Y.
In United States v. Bodmer, the court set conditions of bail for a defendant who had consented to extradition.
2004-06-28 • S.D.N.Y.
United States v. Bodmer, where bail was set for a defendant who had consented to extradition, with the court finding the government's argument about financial resources was speculative.
2004-06-28 • S.D.N.Y.
Decision in the case of United States v. Bodmer.
2004-01-28 • S.D.N.Y.
United States v. Bodmer, No. 03 Cr. 947 (SAS), 2004 WL 169790 (S.D.N.Y. June 28, 2004)
2004-06-28 • Southern District of New York
United States v. Bodmer ruling
2004-06-28 • S.D.N.Y.
Bodmer case proceedings
2004-01-01 • United States Court
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