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712,511 result(s) for "Prosecutor"
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Watch the exchanges prosecutors say Comey lied to Congress
Prosecutors will seek a grand jury indictment of former FBI director James B. Comey on allegations that he lied to Congress.
How a prosecutor secures an indictment from a grand jury
Law professor and former prosecutor Mushtaq Gunja explains how the grand jury works in criminal prosecution.
Situation in the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan
On March 5, 2020, the Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Court (ICC) decided to authorize the prosecutor to commence a proprio motu investigation into the alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during the Afghanistan War since 2003. This decision is the first case where the requirements for the authorization of an investigation under Article 15(4) of the ICC Rome Statute (Statute) were tested on appeal. The case lays down a marker as to how the ICC sees the division of roles between the Pre-Trial Chamber and the Office of the Prosecutor. The Appeals Chamber proved willing to give the prosecutor broad discretion at the investigation stage. Without limiting principles, this approach may eventually expand the role of the Court beyond what the Statute permits.
Supreme Court to hear challenge to Jan. 6 obstruction charge
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments about whether a man involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol can be charged with obstructing an official proceeding. The case could also impact Trump’s own prosecution for allegedly trying to remain in power after his 2020 defeat.
The Nature of Public Interest as the Basis for the Prosecutor's Authority to File for Bankruptcy
Objective: The prosecutor's office in making policies to represent the public interest is a form of realization of law enforcement and justice. Not all public interests can be represented by the Prosecutor's Office when filing for bankruptcy. The public interest that can be represented by the Prosecutor's Office as a basis for submitting a bankruptcy application is the interest of the majority. The aim is to formulate the nature of the public interest as the basis for the Prosecutor's authority to file for Bankruptcy.   Methode:This research is a type of normative research.   Result: The essence of the public interest as the basis for the Prosecutor's authority to file for bankruptcy is the Prosecutor's policy in making decisions that represent the interests of the majority, so that the Prosecutor can realize the hope of implementing law enforcement and achieving justice.
El pasado autoritario de la justicia transicional mexicana
El tema de la justicia transicional mexicana, materializado a través de una Fiscalía Especial que funcionó entre 2001 y 2006, sigue siendo ignorado en la academia. La mayoría de los estudios existentes supone que la Fiscalía Especial fue creada para generar resultados que contribuirían a la consolidación de la democracia mexicana: particularmente, verdad y justicia. También señalan que esta institución fracasó, porque no obtuvo verdad ni justicia. No coinciden, sin embargo, sobre las razones detrás de dicho fracaso: falta de voluntad política, ausencia de personal capacitado, elaboración de estrategias jurídicas torpes. Este artículo se aleja de estas interpretaciones y rastrea la genealogía de la Fiscalía Especial. Para hacerlo, analiza críticamente el papel crucial que desempeñó en la justicia transicional la Comisión Nacional de los Derechos Humanos (CNDH), institución que hasta ahora ha sido ignorada en los estudios sobre el tema. El argumento que enmarca esta investigación es que, en México, la justicia transicional fue diseñada por la CNDH de tal manera que contribuyó a perpetuar la injusticia. Este artículo busca mostrar que no es que la Fiscalía Especial haya fracasado en la marcha, sino que desde su origen fue pensada para otorgar un indulto a los perpetradores de crímenes. The issue of transitional justice in Mexico, through the Special Prosecutor’s Office that functioned between 2001 and 2006, continues to be ignored in academia. Most existing studies assume that the Special Prosecutor’s Office was created to generate results to contribute to the consolidation of Mexican democracy, in particular truth and justice. They also point out that this institution failed because it did not achieve truth or justice. They do not agree, however, on the reasons for this failure, such as lack of political will, lack of trained personnel, and clumsy legal strategies. This article moves away from these interpretations and traces the genealogy of the Special Prosecutor’s Office. It critically analyzes the crucial role played in transitional justice by the National Human Rights Commission (CNDH), an institution that has so far been ignored in studies on the subject. The argument framing this research is that, in Mexico, transitional justice was designed by the CNDH in such a way that it contributed to the perpetuation of injustice. This article seeks to show that it is not that the Special Prosecutor’s Office has failed on the ground, but that from its inception was designed to generate impunity.
The effect of the election of prosecutors on criminal trials
We examine whether elections of public prosecutors influence the mix of cases taken to trial versus plea bargained. A theoretical model is constructed wherein voters use outcomes of the criminal justice system as a signal of prosecutors' quality, leading to a distortion in the mix of cases taken to trial. Using data from North Carolina we test whether reelection pressures lead to (a) an increase in the number and proportion of convictions from jury trials and (b) a decrease in the average sanction obtained in both jury trials and pleas. Our empirical findings are consistent with our theoretical predictions.
Georgia prosecutor ‘not happy’ over plea video leak
Fulton County District Attorney Fani T. Willis told The Washington Post on Nov. 14 that she was “not happy” that recorded video statements tied to plea deals in the case against former president Donald Trump were leaked.
Change from Within
A new breed of reform-minded prosecutors tells their stories about the challenges and successes of making change from inside the system Growing up in Chicago’s Cabrini-Green housing projects, Kim Foxx never anticipated that she would become the chief prosecutor in the country’s second-biggest county. When Chesa Boudin was a baby, his parents were arrested and incarcerated. Visiting them in prison for decades helped shape his convictions about what justice does—and doesn’t—look like in the United States. Now, along with eleven other reform-minded prosecutors voters put in office throughout the country, they reflect on the task they set for themselves: making change from within. Using the power of their office, which has traditionally fueled mass incarceration and harsh punishments, this new breed of elected prosecutors has joined the movement to shake up the justice system. In Change from Within , these visionaries describe their journeys to office, what they are doing to change “business as usual,” the pushback they’ve experienced, and their thoughts on reforms that are possible working from the inside. Published in partnership with Fair and Just Prosecution (FJP), drawing from interviews conducted by FJP executive director Miriam Krinsky, a former federal prosecutor, this unprecedented book includes intensely personal first-person profiles of thirteen transformative DAs. Each story is accompanied by an image inspired by the prosecutor and created by a formerly incarcerated artist.
Framing and prosecutorial discretion: evidence from Brazil
Prior studies in the United States argue that the discretionary decisions of federal prosecutors regarding which issues to prioritize are shaped by the politicians who appoint them, while studies on state prosecutors emphasize the role of press coverage and public opinion. However, these studies leave untheorized whether prosecutors’ discretionary decisions are also affected by how their peers frame issues within and beyond prosecution offices. Building on the scholarship of collective action frames, this study develops a framework to explain how prosecutors’ framing work affects their colleagues’ decisions about which issues to focus on. I draw on the case of Brazil, where federal prosecutors focused on crime-fighting and human rights, but in the mid-2010s switched focus to corruption following a large-scale investigation called Lava Jato . I compare Lava Jato with two similarly large investigations that failed to transform corruption into the dominant issue within the Public Prosecutor’s Office. Drawing on 131 original interviews, I show how federal prosecutors’ framing work can persuade their colleagues to focus on the same issue through two stages: (1) conceptualization of versatile frames that speak to problems a variety of issues prosecutors care about and (2) diffusion of frames through professional meetings – providing roadmaps for how other prosecutors can implement the new frame – and to the press, increasing public attention.