Judges in federal criminal cases provide juries with instructions before the jury members retire to consider their verdict. In some situations, the judge may include alternative theories of guilt, informing the jury that it may convict a defendant of a single offense on the basis of one of several different theories. But because most juries in federal criminal trials deliver only a general verdict of either “guilty” or “not guilty,” it is usually not possible to determine the theory upon which the jury relied in reaching its decision. This lack of transparency may be problematic if the defendant appeals his conviction on the basis of an alleged “alternative theory error,” which occurs when one—but not all—of the theories in the jury instruc...
Since 1967, federal courts have conducted harmless error analysis to determine whether to uphold a p...
In most jurisdictions, convicted defendants have the right to an appeal at public expense, and to th...
Indeed, it is difficult to prove one\u27s innocence, and the legal system purports not to require de...
Judges in federal criminal cases provide juries with instructions before the jury members retire to ...
Appellate harmless error review, an early twentieth-century innovation prompted by concerns of effic...
Appellate harmless error review, an early twentieth-century innovation prompted by concerns of effic...
Jury nullification is a legal problem child. Aberrant but built into the Constitution, rebellious bu...
This Article proceeds in four parts. Part II is a brief overview of harmless-error doctrine in the c...
The first part of this essay examines the development of harmless error law and its application to c...
Half a century ago, in Chapman v. California, the Supreme Court imposed on appellate courts an oblig...
Harmless error review is profoundly important, but arguably broken, in the form that courts currentl...
This Article proceeds in four parts. Part II is a brief overview of harmless-error doctrine in the c...
The first part of this essay examines the development of harmless error law and its application to c...
This paper presents an economic model of the harmful error rule in criminal appeals. We test the imp...
Sixty years ago, in Kotteakos v. United States, the Supreme Court ruled that a small class of so-cal...
Since 1967, federal courts have conducted harmless error analysis to determine whether to uphold a p...
In most jurisdictions, convicted defendants have the right to an appeal at public expense, and to th...
Indeed, it is difficult to prove one\u27s innocence, and the legal system purports not to require de...
Judges in federal criminal cases provide juries with instructions before the jury members retire to ...
Appellate harmless error review, an early twentieth-century innovation prompted by concerns of effic...
Appellate harmless error review, an early twentieth-century innovation prompted by concerns of effic...
Jury nullification is a legal problem child. Aberrant but built into the Constitution, rebellious bu...
This Article proceeds in four parts. Part II is a brief overview of harmless-error doctrine in the c...
The first part of this essay examines the development of harmless error law and its application to c...
Half a century ago, in Chapman v. California, the Supreme Court imposed on appellate courts an oblig...
Harmless error review is profoundly important, but arguably broken, in the form that courts currentl...
This Article proceeds in four parts. Part II is a brief overview of harmless-error doctrine in the c...
The first part of this essay examines the development of harmless error law and its application to c...
This paper presents an economic model of the harmful error rule in criminal appeals. We test the imp...
Sixty years ago, in Kotteakos v. United States, the Supreme Court ruled that a small class of so-cal...
Since 1967, federal courts have conducted harmless error analysis to determine whether to uphold a p...
In most jurisdictions, convicted defendants have the right to an appeal at public expense, and to th...
Indeed, it is difficult to prove one\u27s innocence, and the legal system purports not to require de...