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United States
congressional investigationdue process pertinencyfirst amendment
Watkins v. United States
354 U.S. 178 (1957)
Key Principle
Congress's investigatory power, though broad, is not unlimited and carries no authority to expose individuals' private affairs for exposure's sake; a witness compelled to testify must be apprised, with the clarity due process requires, of the subject under inquiry and the pertinency of the questions to that subject before a contempt conviction can stand.
Area of Law
General
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