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Grand Juries http://www.nocompromise.org/issues/22grandjury.html Harassment by a
Federal Grand Jury If you fail to appear as directed, you can be arrested and held until your testimony. Whether you actually get arrested will depend on how badly they want you, and how easy you are to find. If served with a subpoena duces tecum, file a written motion to quash the subpoena, especially where it directs you to produce privileged material or is unduly burdensome or harassing. When it is a regular subpoena, unless you are asked to travel, it may be best not to file a motion to quash, since at least one federal circuit court has decided that any objections not litigated in the motion to quash are waived. Besides, most, if not all, objections you have to testifying cannot be dealt with except on a question-by-question basis. If you appear, you will be taken into the grand jury room, which will have one or more prosecutors, a court reporter, and 16-23 grand jurors. Do not be intimidated. Grand jurors are simply citizens who have been selected for (grand) jury duty. Begin writing down every question. You will be given an oath and first asked your name and address. Thereafter, if you have an attorney, most courts follow the rule that you may consult with your attorney after every question (though a couple courts have said after every few questions), although the prosecutor or grand jury may try to scare you into believing otherwise. Beginning with the first question, and every question thereafter, state, “I invoke my Fifth Amendment privilege.” And while there is no court decision stating that any other objections not raised are waived, it may be a good idea to add, “ . . . and reserve all other objections, privileges, and immunities.” You don’t want to be the first victim of a conservative judge bent on setting a precedent on the issue. After raising your Fifth Amendment privilege a few times, the prosecutor will probably ask you if you intend to invoke your Fifth Amendment privilege to all questions. You can either say, “yes,” or you can say that you cannot know if you will answer a question until you hear it. At this stage, you may be excused. Or, the prosecutor may seek to give you immunity, which must be approved by a judge. (Immunity could have been granted before you even got to court.) You will be taken before a judge for an immunity hearing, and the judge will likely rubber- stamp the request. Thereafter, you cannot invoke your Fifth Amendment privilege because it will be moot. Except, when they start asking about other people you know, try asserting your Fifth Amendment privilege on the basis that the granting of immunity cannot protect you, because if such persons are charged with some sort of conspiracy in another case, admitting you know those persons could lead to your getting named as a defendant in such case. Other bases for either objecting and/or refusing to answer any individual question, despite having been given immunity, include but are not limited to the following: The question
violates your First Amendment right to privacy of association and belief. You refuse to
answer on the ground that the purpose of the proceedings is not to investigate
or indict a potential crime, but to gather intelligence, to harass you, and to
terrorize and fragment the animal rights community. If the prosecutor wants to compel an answer, he or she will first have to take you before a judge for a hearing. Argue initially that you need more time and/or you want to brief the issue. Assuming that request is denied and your objections are overruled, the judge will order you to answer the question(s), and you will be taken back to the grand jury room. At this point
you have to decide whether to answer. Failure to answer will result in
contempt, and you can be held until the end of the grand jury’s term (up to18
mos., depending on when they started; a “special” grand jury can get up to
three 6-mo. extensions). Periodically thereafter, you can file a Grumbles
motion (named after a court case), arguing that you will never answer their
questions, and therefore your incarceration has become punitive and you should
be released. If you decide to answer questions, you may become so stressed and
rattled that you may suffer stress-induced amnesia, such that your answer to
most, if not all, questions will be, “I don’t know” or “I can’t remember.” You
might even ask to see a doctor. Don’t be alarmed. This condition should pass
after you leave the grand jury room.
Important resources for dealing with and understanding Grand Juries: Links to groups monitoring and/or working to support victims of Grand Juries: |
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