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d-22525House OversightOther

House Oversight Hearing Excerpt on Attorney-Client Privilege in CVRA Case

The passage provides a routine procedural exchange about privilege objections in a civil case (CVRA). It mentions no high‑profile individuals, financial transactions, or foreign influence, offering on Mr. Scarola objects to a question on the basis of attorney‑client and common‑interest privilege. Mr. Simpson seeks clarification about a pleading filed in the CVRA case. The discussion hints at a civ

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #021869
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides a routine procedural exchange about privilege objections in a civil case (CVRA). It mentions no high‑profile individuals, financial transactions, or foreign influence, offering on Mr. Scarola objects to a question on the basis of attorney‑client and common‑interest privilege. Mr. Simpson seeks clarification about a pleading filed in the CVRA case. The discussion hints at a civ

Tags

civil-litigationlegal-procedureattorney-client-privilegelegal-exposurehouse-oversightprivilege-claim

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Oo O DN OO FF WwW NY =| NO RO PO PNP NM NO | S| S| HS SF S| S| S| S| S| non BP WO NO -|- ODO OO WDN OO OT BP WO NYO — 46 MR. SIMPSON: Let me -- MR. SCAROLA: You are not permitted to get indirectly what you cannot get directly, and by phrasing the questions as you have phrased them, you are attempting to narrow down the source of information to an attorney/client privileged communication. I can't allow the witness to respond to that question and thus disclose information that may fall within the scope of the attorney/client privilege or common interest privilege. BY MR. SIMPSON: Q. Let me ask it -- try asking it this way: You filed this pleading in the CVRA case; is that correct? A. Yes. Q. And if I understand correctly, you have argued and the court has agreed that this is a civil proceeding; is that right? A. That's a very complicated question that would require a longer answer, so I'm just tipping you off, if you want a long answer, we can talk about that. Q. Give me a fair answer to the question. What's been your position and have there been rulings on the nature of the proceeding? A. So this requires some context here. This ROUGH DRAFT ONLY

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