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- Search Engine; Right To Be Forgotten; Right To Deindex; Right Of Publicity; Right Of Privacy; Google Spain; Privacy; Google; Google Spain V. AEPD; Private Information; First Amendment; Free Speech; Court Of Justice Of The European Union; CJEU; Publicity; Search Results; European Union; Haelan Laboratories (1)
- White-collar crime; Compelled testimony; Cross-border; International white-collar investigation; Financial corporations; International; Multijurisdictional; United States v. Allen; Kastigar hearing; DOJ; Department of Justice; MLAT; Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty; Taint; Taint Teams; Parallel Investigations; Future Foreign Corrupt Practices Act; Fifth Amendment; Derivative Use Immunity; Financial Conduct Authority; FCA (1)
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The (Not-So) “Brave New World Of International Criminal Enforcement”: The Intricacies Of Multi-Jurisdictional White-Collar Investigations, Emily T. Carlson
The (Not-So) “Brave New World Of International Criminal Enforcement”: The Intricacies Of Multi-Jurisdictional White-Collar Investigations, Emily T. Carlson
Brooklyn Law Review
We have entered a new age of international white-collar crime and are seeing the growing interdependency of the Department of Justice (DOJ) and parallel foreign agencies to conduct investigations and subsequent prosecutorial proceedings. This coordination to combat these crimes, however, has revealed a troubling question—how can enforcement agencies work effectively together if they have fundamental differences in the legal authority governing testimony-gathering and what evidence is allowed before a grand jury? The Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in United States v. Allen, confronted this issue directly as it overturned two indictments arising out of suspected manipulation of a …
Search Query: Can America Accept A Right To Be Forgotten As A Publicity Right?, James J. Lavelle
Search Query: Can America Accept A Right To Be Forgotten As A Publicity Right?, James J. Lavelle
Brooklyn Law Review
Search engines have profoundly changed the relationship between privacy and free speech by making personal information widely and cheaply available to a global audience. This has raised many concerns both over how online companies handle the information they collect and how regular citizens use online services to invade other people’s privacy. One way Europe has addressed this change is by providing European Union citizens with a right to petition search engines to deindex links from search results—a so-called “right to be forgotten.” If the information contained in a search result is “inadequate, irrelevant or no longer relevant,” the search engine …