It's transcribed as is, and it's not a word-for-word repeat but an elaboration on some of the details of those topics. The interviews for those last 20 pages or so are separate to the interviews for the earlier pages. This normally happens when an attorney or other person involved in legal matters must confirm or clarify certain details, to strengthen their legal evidence.
Because they are legal evidence, transcripts cannot be "cleaned up" in the manner that you're suggesting, otherwise it's similar to tampering with evidence and no longer a true and certified copy. Note that every interview session is signed by a transcriber who certifies that what they have written is a true copy of what has been spoken.
It's transcribed as is, and it's not a word-for-word repeat but an elaboration on some of the details of those topics. The interviews for those last 20 pages or so are separate to the interviews for the earlier pages. This normally happens when an attorney or other person involved in legal matters must confirm or clarify certain details, to strengthen their legal evidence.
Because they are legal evidence, transcripts cannot be "cleaned up" in the manner that you're suggesting, otherwise it's similar to tampering with evidence and no longer a true and certified copy. Note that every interview session is signed by a transcriber who certifies that what they have transcribed is a true copy of what has been spoken.
It's transcribed as is, and it's not a word-for-word repeat but an elaboration on some of the details of those topics. The interviews for those last 20 pages or so are separate to the interviews for the earlier pages. This normally happens when an attorney or other person involved in legal matters must confirm or clarify certain details, to strengthen their legal evidence.
Because they are legal evidence, transcripts cannot be "cleaned up" in the manner that you're suggesting, otherwise it's similar to tampering with evidence and no longer a true and certified copy. Note that every interview session is signed by a transcriber who certifies that what they have written is a true copy of what has been spoken.
It's transcribed as is, and it's not a word-for-word repeat but an elaboration on some of the details of those topics. The interviews for those last 20 pages or so are separate to the interviews for the earlier pages. This normally happens when an attorney or other person involved in legal matters must confirm or clarify certain details, to strengthen their legal evidence.
Because they are legal evidence, transcripts cannot be "cleaned up" in the manner that you're suggesting, otherwise it's similar to tampering with evidence and no longer a true and certified copy. Note that every interview is signed by a transcriber who certifies that what they have written is a true copy of what has been spoken.