Dark side : secret origins of evidence in US criminal cases / Sarah St. Vincent.
2018
HV8079.N3 S72 2018 (Map It)
Available at Cellar
Formats
Format | |
---|---|
BibTeX | |
MARCXML | |
TextMARC | |
MARC | |
DublinCore | |
EndNote | |
NLM | |
RefWorks | |
RIS |
Items
Details
Author
Title
Dark side : secret origins of evidence in US criminal cases / Sarah St. Vincent.
Published
[New York] : Human Rights Watch, [2018]
Copyright
©2018
Call Number
HV8079.N3 S72 2018
Spine Title
United States. Dark side
ISBN
9781623135645
1623135648
1623135648
Description
77 pages ; 27 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)1020700864
Summary
Methodology -- I. Background -- II. Parallel construction in action -- III. Defendants' difficulties in discovering and challenging parallel construction -- IV. Impact on human rights -- V. Recommendations -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Annex: Background on US surveillance authorities.
"A growing body of evidence suggests US authorities are concealing investigative practices - including practices that may be illegal - by deliberately creating a different story about how agents identified a suspect or came across evidence of wrongdoing. Thanks to this secretive process, known as "parallel construction," people may be imprisoned without ever knowing how the cases against them truly began - or being able to defend their rights in court. ... [This report] - based on reviews of records from 95 court cases, hundreds of pages of government documents, and interviews with defense attorneys as well as current and former US officials - explains how parallel construction works and summarizes the available evidence suggesting the practice is both common and used by a wide range of law enforcement and intelligence agencies. One of the key agencies is the Drug Envofcement Administration's special Operations Division, at least part of which has been nicknamed the "Dark Side."
"A growing body of evidence suggests US authorities are concealing investigative practices - including practices that may be illegal - by deliberately creating a different story about how agents identified a suspect or came across evidence of wrongdoing. Thanks to this secretive process, known as "parallel construction," people may be imprisoned without ever knowing how the cases against them truly began - or being able to defend their rights in court. ... [This report] - based on reviews of records from 95 court cases, hundreds of pages of government documents, and interviews with defense attorneys as well as current and former US officials - explains how parallel construction works and summarizes the available evidence suggesting the practice is both common and used by a wide range of law enforcement and intelligence agencies. One of the key agencies is the Drug Envofcement Administration's special Operations Division, at least part of which has been nicknamed the "Dark Side."
Note
"This report was compiled and written by Sarah St. Vincent"--Page 67.
"January 2018"--Spine.
"January 2018"--Spine.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references.
Record Appears in
Added Corporate Author