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Full-Text Articles in Law
The Constitutional Limits Of Discovery
The Civil Investigative Demand: New Fact-Finding Powers For The Antitrust Division, Richard L. Perry, William Simon
The Civil Investigative Demand: New Fact-Finding Powers For The Antitrust Division, Richard L. Perry, William Simon
Michigan Law Review
The complexity, scope and length of modem antitrust litigation bring to prominence the procedures by which evidence - particularly documentary evidence - is discovered and placed before the courts and administrative agencies. Fact-finding mechanisms now available for ferreting out and prosecuting violations make up an imposing array. These include the grand jury subpoena, the discovery provisions of the Federal Rules of Civil and Criminal Procedure and the subpoena and visitorial powers of certain administrative agencies. The "civil investigative demand," a precomplaint compulsory process, is a new weapon proposed to be added to this arsenal. Few dispute the desirability of new …
Book Reviews, Laurence H. Eldredge, Henry N. Williams
Book Reviews, Laurence H. Eldredge, Henry N. Williams
Vanderbilt Law Review
Evidence of Guilt: Restrictions Upon its Discovery or Compulsory Disclosure
By John MacArthur Maguire
Boston: Little, Brown &Co. 1959. Pp. xi, 295. $12.50
reviewer: Edmund M. Morgan
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Government and Public Administration
By John D. Millett
New York. McGraw-Hill Book Co. 1959. Pp. x, 477. $7.95
reviewer: Henry N. Williams