Since 1986, the country has been witness to a revolution in federal sentencing practice: indeterminate sentencing, dominated by discretion and focused on the rehabilitative prospects of the offender, has been replaced by guidelines infused with offense-based considerations. As sweeping as the change in sentencing procedure has been, the system retains troubling aspects of the former regime. The most controversial among these is the Guidelines\u27 reliance on unadjudicated conduct to determine proper punishment levels. This approach is a variation on “real offense” sentencing, which severs the punishment inquiry from the offense of conviction, focusing instead on an offender\u27s actual conduct. Under the Guidelines, the real offense oft...
Although it represents an impressive intellectual effort, the present federal sentencing structure i...
A lively debate began in the late 1970\u27s on the topic of criminal sentencing. A major attack was ...
For most of the last decade, I numbered myself among the supporters of the Federal Sentencing Guidel...
We are accustomed to thinking about the criminal law, and the procedures for enforcing it, as divide...
Federal sentencing law is widely applied to punish offenders not only for the offenses of which they...
The thesis of this Article is that the substantive criminal law is the missing element in sentencing...
The Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 sought to bring consistency, coherence, and accountability to a fe...
The choice to embrace a real-offense regime probably constitutes the single most controversial decis...
This Article discusses an important federal sentencing issue that has received little scholarly atte...
The federal sentencing guidelines, which focus on offense based statistical consistency, had a rippl...
The Columbia Law Review\u27s Symposium on sentencing, which took place less than two weeks after the...
In 1984 the Sentencing Reform Act was passed, ending fully discretionary sentencing by judges and al...
Federal sentencing law is widely applied to punish offenders not only for the offenses of which they...
Now that it has been more than four years since Senate Bill 2 became effective, this is a good time ...
The central innovation of the guidelines sentencing revolution has been the creation of a regime in ...
Although it represents an impressive intellectual effort, the present federal sentencing structure i...
A lively debate began in the late 1970\u27s on the topic of criminal sentencing. A major attack was ...
For most of the last decade, I numbered myself among the supporters of the Federal Sentencing Guidel...
We are accustomed to thinking about the criminal law, and the procedures for enforcing it, as divide...
Federal sentencing law is widely applied to punish offenders not only for the offenses of which they...
The thesis of this Article is that the substantive criminal law is the missing element in sentencing...
The Sentencing Reform Act of 1984 sought to bring consistency, coherence, and accountability to a fe...
The choice to embrace a real-offense regime probably constitutes the single most controversial decis...
This Article discusses an important federal sentencing issue that has received little scholarly atte...
The federal sentencing guidelines, which focus on offense based statistical consistency, had a rippl...
The Columbia Law Review\u27s Symposium on sentencing, which took place less than two weeks after the...
In 1984 the Sentencing Reform Act was passed, ending fully discretionary sentencing by judges and al...
Federal sentencing law is widely applied to punish offenders not only for the offenses of which they...
Now that it has been more than four years since Senate Bill 2 became effective, this is a good time ...
The central innovation of the guidelines sentencing revolution has been the creation of a regime in ...
Although it represents an impressive intellectual effort, the present federal sentencing structure i...
A lively debate began in the late 1970\u27s on the topic of criminal sentencing. A major attack was ...
For most of the last decade, I numbered myself among the supporters of the Federal Sentencing Guidel...