
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In 2005, Charles Rehberg annoyed some politically powerful people in his community of Albany, Georgia, and found himself facing serious criminal charges—charges that were completely made up by a rogue prosecutor and could only be sustained because an investigator committed perjury. In Episode 10, we explore the case of Rehberg v. Paulk, which reached the Supreme Court in 2012.
On Part 1 of Episode 10: the doctrine of absolute prosecutorial immunity, where it came from, and why the Supreme Court thinks it’s a good idea.
Click here for transcript. Click here for Episode 1.
Click for Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, TuneIn, and Stitcher.
The post Prosecutors, Perjurers, and Other Non-Persons — Part 1 | Season 2, Ep. 10 appeared first on Institute for Justice.
4.8
307307 ratings
In 2005, Charles Rehberg annoyed some politically powerful people in his community of Albany, Georgia, and found himself facing serious criminal charges—charges that were completely made up by a rogue prosecutor and could only be sustained because an investigator committed perjury. In Episode 10, we explore the case of Rehberg v. Paulk, which reached the Supreme Court in 2012.
On Part 1 of Episode 10: the doctrine of absolute prosecutorial immunity, where it came from, and why the Supreme Court thinks it’s a good idea.
Click here for transcript. Click here for Episode 1.
Click for Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, TuneIn, and Stitcher.
The post Prosecutors, Perjurers, and Other Non-Persons — Part 1 | Season 2, Ep. 10 appeared first on Institute for Justice.
1,104 Listeners
4,223 Listeners
959 Listeners
174 Listeners
2,250 Listeners
662 Listeners
2,837 Listeners
1,500 Listeners
963 Listeners
39 Listeners
725 Listeners
373 Listeners
666 Listeners
100 Listeners
0 Listeners