St. Thomas Law Review
First Page
537
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Recently, the front pages of the New York Times and the Washington Post have made witnesses before the grand jury a special topic for morning coffee. Issues of foul tactics, parental immunity, grand jury voyeurism, and the Fifth Amendment have reigned in the tabloids and on television.Today, in law, the representation of subpoenaed witnesses has become a subject as vast as that of contracts and as complicated as common law property.
Recommended Citation
Jack M. Denaro,
Representation of Subpoenaed Witnesses,
10
St. Thomas L. Rev.
537
(1998).
Available at:
https://scholarship.stu.edu/stlr/vol10/iss3/5