The opinions of experts in prediction in civil commitment hearings should help the courts, but over thirty years of commentary, judicial opinion, and scientific review argue that predictions of danger lack scientific rigor. The United States Supreme Court has commented regularly on the uncertainty of predictive science. The American Psychiatric Association has argued to the Court that [t]he professional literature uniformly establishes that such predictions are fundamentally of very low reliability. Scientific studies indicate that some predictions do little better than chance or lay speculation, and even the best predictions leave substantial room for error about individual cases. The sharpest critique finds that mental health professio...
The imposition of substantive and procedural protections in the civil commitment process thirty year...
Monday, January 7, 2013 Associate Professor and Director of Civil Clinics Alexander W. Scherr\u27sar...
This article, written for a symposium on Guilt v. Guiltiness: Are the Right Rules for Trying Factua...
The opinions of experts in prediction in civil commitment hearings should help the courts, but over ...
Civil commitment, confinement under sexual predator laws, and many capital and noncapital sentences ...
This article examines several Supreme Court decisions and surveys recent literature and caselaw to a...
Never make predictions, especially about the future. But in civil commitments, courts predict future...
In Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc., the Supreme Court sensibly held that testimony purpo...
Testimony about the future dangerousness of a person has become a central staple of many j...
Judges and juries must make momentous and intricate decisions. The temptation is overwhelming for th...
In Furman v. Georgia, the United States Supreme Court held that it was unconstitutional to administe...
Despite the establishment of the Daubert standard in 1993, the evidentiary criteria are rarely used ...
Although the Supreme Court elaborated a standard for the admissibility of expert testimony in Dauber...
In Daubert, the Supreme Court opined that opposing expert testimony is an effective safeguard agains...
The defendant-first approach advocated in this Article is more difficult to implement than either th...
The imposition of substantive and procedural protections in the civil commitment process thirty year...
Monday, January 7, 2013 Associate Professor and Director of Civil Clinics Alexander W. Scherr\u27sar...
This article, written for a symposium on Guilt v. Guiltiness: Are the Right Rules for Trying Factua...
The opinions of experts in prediction in civil commitment hearings should help the courts, but over ...
Civil commitment, confinement under sexual predator laws, and many capital and noncapital sentences ...
This article examines several Supreme Court decisions and surveys recent literature and caselaw to a...
Never make predictions, especially about the future. But in civil commitments, courts predict future...
In Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc., the Supreme Court sensibly held that testimony purpo...
Testimony about the future dangerousness of a person has become a central staple of many j...
Judges and juries must make momentous and intricate decisions. The temptation is overwhelming for th...
In Furman v. Georgia, the United States Supreme Court held that it was unconstitutional to administe...
Despite the establishment of the Daubert standard in 1993, the evidentiary criteria are rarely used ...
Although the Supreme Court elaborated a standard for the admissibility of expert testimony in Dauber...
In Daubert, the Supreme Court opined that opposing expert testimony is an effective safeguard agains...
The defendant-first approach advocated in this Article is more difficult to implement than either th...
The imposition of substantive and procedural protections in the civil commitment process thirty year...
Monday, January 7, 2013 Associate Professor and Director of Civil Clinics Alexander W. Scherr\u27sar...
This article, written for a symposium on Guilt v. Guiltiness: Are the Right Rules for Trying Factua...