This is a piece about prosecutorial incentives in our criminal justice system and ways to reconstruct those incentives. I describe a proposal to influence and structure a prosecutor\u27s discretion and to limit prosecutorial misconduct through financial incentives. More specifically, I propose that a system of financial rewards could influence the public prosecutor\u27s charging decisions and control prosecutorial misconduct occurring at trial. By exploring the potential of financial incentives as a mechanism to influence the manner in which the prosecutor approaches the various tasks of her job, I hope to better conceptualize the role of the public prosecutor in our criminal justice system. The reward system I describe centers on the idea ...
Although courts have traditionally relied primarily on prosecutors’ individual self-restraint and in...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
The article examines incentives in law, because legal incentives are a strong lever of motivational ...
This is a piece about prosecutorial incentives in our criminal justice system and ways to reconstruc...
Prosecutorial discretion is a problem that most scholars attack from the outside. Most scholars favo...
This column explores whether contingent reward plans for prosecutors are ethical. After weighing arg...
This article considers the possibility of simultaneously reducing crime, prison sentences, and the t...
Prosecutors are the most powerful officials in the American criminal justice system. The decisions t...
It is natural to suppose that a prosecutor\u27s conviction rate—the ratio of convictions to cases pr...
In this Article, Professor Lee examines the government motion requirement for substantial assistance...
It is natural to suppose that a prosecutor’s conviction rate – the ratio of convictions to cases pro...
This dissertation consists of three essays on compensation, incentives, and representation in the Un...
It is natural to suppose that a prosecutor’s conviction rate – the ratio of convictions to cases pro...
In the United States, prosecutors regularly resolve corporate criminal cases through the use of Defe...
This paper analyzes how the budget allocated to state prosecutors varies from one district to anothe...
Although courts have traditionally relied primarily on prosecutors’ individual self-restraint and in...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
The article examines incentives in law, because legal incentives are a strong lever of motivational ...
This is a piece about prosecutorial incentives in our criminal justice system and ways to reconstruc...
Prosecutorial discretion is a problem that most scholars attack from the outside. Most scholars favo...
This column explores whether contingent reward plans for prosecutors are ethical. After weighing arg...
This article considers the possibility of simultaneously reducing crime, prison sentences, and the t...
Prosecutors are the most powerful officials in the American criminal justice system. The decisions t...
It is natural to suppose that a prosecutor\u27s conviction rate—the ratio of convictions to cases pr...
In this Article, Professor Lee examines the government motion requirement for substantial assistance...
It is natural to suppose that a prosecutor’s conviction rate – the ratio of convictions to cases pro...
This dissertation consists of three essays on compensation, incentives, and representation in the Un...
It is natural to suppose that a prosecutor’s conviction rate – the ratio of convictions to cases pro...
In the United States, prosecutors regularly resolve corporate criminal cases through the use of Defe...
This paper analyzes how the budget allocated to state prosecutors varies from one district to anothe...
Although courts have traditionally relied primarily on prosecutors’ individual self-restraint and in...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
The article examines incentives in law, because legal incentives are a strong lever of motivational ...