Klaus Volk
Klaus Volk (born 29 April 1944) is a German jurist, professor at University of Munich and defense lawyer specialized in commercial-law-related criminal cases.
Klaus Volk | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | German |
Occupation | jurist |
His doctorate thesis at University of Munich 1970 was about philosophy of law.
Among his clients were Josef Ackermann[1] (see Mannesmann Trial), Joachim Zahn and Boris Becker.[2]
Volk was critical towards the "security measures" of Wolfgang Schäuble against terrorists.[3]
Notes
- Picture of Volk and Ackermann Getty Images
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-02-10. Retrieved 2009-12-27.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
gollark: There's the PinePhone and Librem 5.
gollark: There are... two GNU/Linux phones, but none with keyboards.
gollark: I know, right?
gollark: I wouldn't mind a thicker phone. I already have one of those thick wallet-y cases.
gollark: It would be really nice to get phones with several-day battery life. The annoying thing is that lithium ion batteries *are* improving, becoming higher density and all, but the phones just get thinner and less efficient somehow.
External links
- Klaus Volk in the German National Library catalogue
- "The principles of criminal procedure and post-modern society: contradictions and perspectives". Paper delivered at the International Society for the reform of Criminal Law in the Hague, Netherlands, 2003.
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