January 01, 2003
Congress enacted an amendment to Section 3283, extending the statute of limitations.
| Name | Type | Mentions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Congress | location | 8 | View Entity |
DOJ-OGR-00021693.jpg
This legal document argues that a 2003 amendment to Section 3283, which extended a statute of limitations, was properly applied to Maxwell's case under the 'Landgraf' legal framework. It contends that since the original limitations period had not expired when Congress passed the amendment, the charges against Maxwell are timely. The document also cites evidence from a separate case (United States v. Rutigliano) showing that an individual named Carolyn visited Epstein's residence through 2004, establishing a relevant timeline.
Events with shared participants
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act established authority for TARP.
2008-01-01 • USA
The passage of the federal Bail Reform Act.
1984-01-01
Robert Mueller testimony before Congress
2019-07-01 • Capitol Hill
Enactment of the Crime Victims’ Rights Act (referenced in footnote).
2004-01-01 • USA
Chuck Hagel's confirmation hearing
Date unknown • Washington D.C.
President Obama signs H.R. 3547, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014, into Public Law 113-76.
2014-01-17 • Washington D.C.
Passage of the Military Commissions Act
2006-01-01 • United States
The legislative history of §3283 originates from the 1986 Sexual Abuse Act.
1986-01-01
Congress amended § 3283 as part of the PROTECT Act, removing the statute of limitations for certain offenses against children.
2003-01-01
Discussion and interpretation of the application of § 3283 statute of limitations, referencing Supreme Court and Circuit Court precedents regarding war frauds and child sex abuse statutes.
Date unknown
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein event