Abstract
A transcript of an interview with Glyn Morgan by Linda Carter and David P. Briand. The interview took place on May 25, 2015 at The Hague, Netherlands, and the transcript, which is represented here, has been reviewed and edited from the original audio version. During the interview, Morgan reminisces on application to and initial work for the ICTY; serving a search warrant at Krajina corps [Bosnian-Serb army unit] headquarters with United Nations Protection Force [UNPROFOR]; work with the military analysis team in the early days of the tribunal; camaraderie and social interaction between tribunal offices and nationalities; visit to the European Commission Monitoring Mission [ECMM] archives; first field mission in the former Yugoslavia; exhumation of mass graves and eviction identification after NATO occupation, and celebration after the arrest of Slobodan Milošević. Morgan also discusses development of process for investigating war crimes on a large scale; integration of civil law and common law experiences into the ICTY processes; creation of an analytical approach to investigating command responsibility; process of obtaining intelligence from various sources; admissibility concessions for intelligence from non-governmental organizations [NGOs] and other neutral sources, and ICTY's effectiveness as an accountability mechanism.