Congress provided for the creation of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines to promote fairness and produce proportional and uniform sentences. The Guidelines provide judges with a guideline range for sentencing based on a defendant’s criminal history score and the offense level of the defendant’s criminal conduct. A defendant’s prior “intervening arrests” are considered in computing her criminal history score. But the current version of the Guidelines does not clearly define what constitutes an intervening arrest for the purposes of calculating an offender’s score. Consequently, a split has developed between circuit courts as to whether a criminal traffic citation constitutes an intervening arrest when determining a defendant’s criminal history s...
Our American criminal justice system is too often described as broken. It was not a clean break in ...
This Note highlights a potential prosecutorial abuse at the intersection of RICO and the Sentencing ...
We are accustomed to thinking about the criminal law, and the procedures for enforcing it, as divide...
Congress provided for the creation of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines to promote fairness and produce...
Since 1986, the country has been witness to a revolution in federal sentencing practice: indetermina...
Now that it has been more than four years since Senate Bill 2 became effective, this is a good time ...
The United States imprisons a greater proportion of its own population than any other country in the...
There are currently over 175,000 federal inmates in the United States, 146,000 of whom are held in c...
Federal appellate courts are currently split on the definition of “controlled substance” in the care...
The Supreme Court has set forth in detail the standards that govern convicted prisoners’ Eighth Amen...
In the realm of undercover work, law enforcement has broad discretion to define the contours of a cr...
Guilty pleas have come to resolve all but a fraction of federal criminal cases. So for most federal ...
This Note argues that sentence manipulation should be a legally viable partial defense - a defense t...
Our American criminal justice system is too often described as broken. It was not a clean break in a...
This note analyzes the current circuit split over the application of the “Physical Restraint” senten...
Our American criminal justice system is too often described as broken. It was not a clean break in ...
This Note highlights a potential prosecutorial abuse at the intersection of RICO and the Sentencing ...
We are accustomed to thinking about the criminal law, and the procedures for enforcing it, as divide...
Congress provided for the creation of the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines to promote fairness and produce...
Since 1986, the country has been witness to a revolution in federal sentencing practice: indetermina...
Now that it has been more than four years since Senate Bill 2 became effective, this is a good time ...
The United States imprisons a greater proportion of its own population than any other country in the...
There are currently over 175,000 federal inmates in the United States, 146,000 of whom are held in c...
Federal appellate courts are currently split on the definition of “controlled substance” in the care...
The Supreme Court has set forth in detail the standards that govern convicted prisoners’ Eighth Amen...
In the realm of undercover work, law enforcement has broad discretion to define the contours of a cr...
Guilty pleas have come to resolve all but a fraction of federal criminal cases. So for most federal ...
This Note argues that sentence manipulation should be a legally viable partial defense - a defense t...
Our American criminal justice system is too often described as broken. It was not a clean break in a...
This note analyzes the current circuit split over the application of the “Physical Restraint” senten...
Our American criminal justice system is too often described as broken. It was not a clean break in ...
This Note highlights a potential prosecutorial abuse at the intersection of RICO and the Sentencing ...
We are accustomed to thinking about the criminal law, and the procedures for enforcing it, as divide...