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Journal ArticleDOI

The Constitutional Privilege Against Self-Incrimination

Telford Taylor
- 01 Jul 1955 - 
- Vol. 300, Iss: 1, pp 114-122
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TLDR
Taylor as mentioned in this paper discusses the impact of the Fifth Amendment in the academic world and argues that it should be disbarred from all lawyers who plead the Fifth amendment in the United States, even in the State of Florida.
Abstract
T HE preceding article by President Taylor of Sarah Lawrence College covers very fully and clearly the question of the impact of the Fifth Amendment in the academic world. University presidents and professors, however, need not feel lonely in this field, for in my own profession there is now a strong movement in some quarters to disbar all lawyers who plead the Fifth Amendment. Indeed in the State of Florida it

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Dissertation

The confiscation of criminal assets: tackling organised crime through a ‘middleground’ system of justice

Colin King
TL;DR: In this article, it is argued that civil forfeiture, while purportedly a civil procedure, is, de facto, a form of criminal punishment and, as such, the difficulty here is how to distinguish the civil from the criminal, and when criminal procedural safeguards ought to be applied.
References
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Dissertation

The confiscation of criminal assets: tackling organised crime through a ‘middleground’ system of justice

Colin King
TL;DR: In this article, it is argued that civil forfeiture, while purportedly a civil procedure, is, de facto, a form of criminal punishment and, as such, the difficulty here is how to distinguish the civil from the criminal, and when criminal procedural safeguards ought to be applied.