The Supreme Court\u27s mid-1980s decision in Ake v. Oklahoma established the defendant\u27s constitutional right to competent psychiatric assistance. Although many states had already provided indigent defendants access to psychiatric assistance in their defense, it was not until the Court decided Ake that this access was established as his or her constitutional right. However, whether this due process right to expert assistance was satisfied by the mere appointment of a psychiatrist or whether it included the requirement that the expert perform competently had remained unanswered as of 1992. This Comment attempts to address this issue in the affirmative and additionally develops a standard upon which the issue can be reviewed by the court...
This Article addresses the questions of attorney error and client competency and examines the follow...
This Article concerns the due process requirements in determining a mental patient’s competency to m...
This Article has argued that the defense attorney has a multifaceted fiduciary duty toward the clien...
This Note attempts to define the boundaries of the indigent criminal defendant\u27s constitutional r...
This note analyzes the public policy implications of the Ake decision while considering the resultin...
demonstrate that their sanity is likely to be a significant factor at trial, the State must assure t...
Although securing the services of defense experts to examine evidence, to advise counsel, and to tes...
Since the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Ake v. Oklahoma, it has attempted to determine and clarify ...
The Supreme Court recently heard the case of an Alabama death row inmate, James McWilliams. A thus f...
The federal government and many states already provide psychiatric assistance to indigent defendants...
Nearly a decade ago, the United States Supreme Court in McMann v. Richardson held that the sixth ame...
This note analyzes the public policy implications of the Ake decision while considering the resultin...
The Supreme Court recently heard the case of an Alabama death row inmate, James McWilliams. A thus f...
This Article advocates alternatives to relying on expert testimony in cases that evaluate the mental...
The right to refuse treatment is firmly recognized in U.S. law. Competent persons have the legal rig...
This Article addresses the questions of attorney error and client competency and examines the follow...
This Article concerns the due process requirements in determining a mental patient’s competency to m...
This Article has argued that the defense attorney has a multifaceted fiduciary duty toward the clien...
This Note attempts to define the boundaries of the indigent criminal defendant\u27s constitutional r...
This note analyzes the public policy implications of the Ake decision while considering the resultin...
demonstrate that their sanity is likely to be a significant factor at trial, the State must assure t...
Although securing the services of defense experts to examine evidence, to advise counsel, and to tes...
Since the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Ake v. Oklahoma, it has attempted to determine and clarify ...
The Supreme Court recently heard the case of an Alabama death row inmate, James McWilliams. A thus f...
The federal government and many states already provide psychiatric assistance to indigent defendants...
Nearly a decade ago, the United States Supreme Court in McMann v. Richardson held that the sixth ame...
This note analyzes the public policy implications of the Ake decision while considering the resultin...
The Supreme Court recently heard the case of an Alabama death row inmate, James McWilliams. A thus f...
This Article advocates alternatives to relying on expert testimony in cases that evaluate the mental...
The right to refuse treatment is firmly recognized in U.S. law. Competent persons have the legal rig...
This Article addresses the questions of attorney error and client competency and examines the follow...
This Article concerns the due process requirements in determining a mental patient’s competency to m...
This Article has argued that the defense attorney has a multifaceted fiduciary duty toward the clien...