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Tampering can refer to many forms of sabotage but the term is often used to mean intentional modification of products in a way that would make them harmful to the consumer. This threat has prompted manufacturers to make products that are either difficult to modify or at least difficult to modify without warning the consumer that the product has ...
Tampering with evidence is closely related to the legal issue of spoliation of evidence, which is usually the civil law or due process version of the same concept (but may itself be a crime). Tampering with evidence is also closely related to obstruction of justice and perverting the course of justice, and these two kinds of crimes are often ...
In 1982, in response to concerns that the obstruction law did not provide adequate protection to crime victims and other witnesses, Congress broadened the law against witness tampering and criminalized retaliation against witnesses, as part of the Victim and Witness Protection Act. [21]
The House select committee investigating Jan. 6 is holding its second prime-time hearing on Thursday, which will focus on the Trump White House's reaction to the insurrection as it unfolded.
Prosecutors have charged a 21-year-old Kansas City man with adulterating food at the Hereford House restaurant in Leawood. It’s not the first such case in the area.
Here are 4 charts that show the issues brick-and-mortar retailers in several major markets are facing. Crime isn’t the full story: What else is affecting retailers in urban areas, in 4 charts ...
Tampering may refer to: Tampering (crime), intentional modification of products in a way that would make them harmful to the consumer Tampering with evidence, a form of criminal falsification; Witness tampering, an illegal attempt to coerce witnesses called to testify in a legal proceeding
Witness tampering is the act of attempting to improperly influence, alter or prevent the testimony of witnesses within criminal or civil proceedings. Witness tampering and reprisals against witnesses in organized crime cases have been a difficulty faced by prosecutors; witness protection programs were one response to this problem.