Surreptitious efforts to influence an official charged with the duty of deciding contested issues upon an open record in accord with basic principles of our jurisdiction, eat at the very heart of our system ' of government - - due process, fair play,... Rhodes Tavern (preservation and Restoration): Hearing and Markup Before the ... - Page 536by United States. Congress. House. Committee on the District of Columbia. Subcommittee on Government Operations and Metropolitan Affairs - 1983 - 882 pagesFull view - About this book
| United States. Federal Communications Commission - 1966 - 1744 pages
...adjudicator? functions of an administrative agency. This is not a mere technicality. Surreptitous efforts to influence an official charged with the duty of...open record in accord with basic principles of our jurisdiction, eat at the very heart of onr system of government — due process, fair play, opeu proceedings,... | |
| United States. Federal Communications Commission - 1971 - 1088 pages
...to comply with the Commission's rules, and is in no way suggestive of " '* * * surreptitious efforts to influence an official charged with the duty of deciding contested issues upon an open record * * *'." WKAT. Inc. v. FCC , 111 US App. DC 253, 261, 296 F. 2d 375, 383, 21 RR 2100, 2103, cert, denied... | |
| United States. Federal Communications Commission - 1995 - 620 pages
...parte presentations compromise the fairness of a proceeding where they reflect "[surreptitious efforts to influence an official charged with the duty of...accord with basic principles of our jurisprudence." Id. 19. Similar due process principles have led some courts to conclude that decision-makers should... | |
| James W. Brock - 340 pages
...Senators who had sponsored Mack for appointment to the FCC Despite the surreptitious efforts of these men "to influence an official charged with the duty of...open record in accord with basic principles of our jurisprudence,"16 however, Commissioner Mack did not disqualify himself from the proceedings. On the... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Banking, Finance, and Urban Affairs - 1992 - 292 pages
...what I will read here as a basic premise in which a judicial decision is made. Surreptitious efforts to influence an official charged with the duty of deciding contested issues upon an open record in that court with basic principles or jurisdictions eat at the very heart of our system of government:... | |
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