This Article is the twelfth of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed to illustrate the feasibility and advantages of a simplified approach to federal sentencing proposed by the Constitution Project Sentencing Initiative. The Model Sentencing Guidelines and the Constitution Project report are all to be published in Volume 18, Number 5 of the Federal Sentencing Reporter. The project is described in an essay titled \u27Tis a Gift To Be Simple: A Model Reform of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, available on SSRN at http://ssrn.com/abstract=927929. This segment of the project contains rules governing the imposition of sentences below the applicable sentencing range (departures) based on factors not adequately a...
We are accustomed to thinking about the criminal law, and the procedures for enforcing it, as divide...
This Article takes a statistical look at the state of federal sentencing roughly a decade after Unit...
For most of the last decade, I numbered myself among the supporters of the Federal Sentencing Guidel...
This Article is the first of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed t...
This Article is the second of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed ...
This Article is the twelfth of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed...
This Article is the ninth of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed t...
This Article is the tenth of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed t...
This Article is the third of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed t...
This essay introducing the June 2006 edition of the Federal Sentencing Reporter (Vol. 18, No. 5) des...
This Article proposes a simplified sentencing table consisting of nine base sentencing ranges, each ...
This Article discusses the sensibility of each of these three options. Part II sets forth a hypothet...
In 1987, the Nation’s first attempt to standardize federal sentencing came in the form of the United...
Although it represents an impressive intellectual effort, the present federal sentencing structure i...
For the last twenty years, much of the discussion about the criminal justice system has focused on c...
We are accustomed to thinking about the criminal law, and the procedures for enforcing it, as divide...
This Article takes a statistical look at the state of federal sentencing roughly a decade after Unit...
For most of the last decade, I numbered myself among the supporters of the Federal Sentencing Guidel...
This Article is the first of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed t...
This Article is the second of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed ...
This Article is the twelfth of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed...
This Article is the ninth of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed t...
This Article is the tenth of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed t...
This Article is the third of twelve parts of a set of Model Federal Sentencing Guidelines designed t...
This essay introducing the June 2006 edition of the Federal Sentencing Reporter (Vol. 18, No. 5) des...
This Article proposes a simplified sentencing table consisting of nine base sentencing ranges, each ...
This Article discusses the sensibility of each of these three options. Part II sets forth a hypothet...
In 1987, the Nation’s first attempt to standardize federal sentencing came in the form of the United...
Although it represents an impressive intellectual effort, the present federal sentencing structure i...
For the last twenty years, much of the discussion about the criminal justice system has focused on c...
We are accustomed to thinking about the criminal law, and the procedures for enforcing it, as divide...
This Article takes a statistical look at the state of federal sentencing roughly a decade after Unit...
For most of the last decade, I numbered myself among the supporters of the Federal Sentencing Guidel...