the first section of this essay is devoted to demonstrating the courts\u27 errors. Nonetheless, considered together, these opinions are perhaps an understandable reflection of judicial unease with an important component of the federal sentencing system — the longstanding, but increasingly common, practice of making deals with criminal defendants to reduce their sentences in return for testimony against their accomplices. This Article\u27s second section will consider the most common criticisms of the system of bargaining for testimony under the United States Sentencing Guidelines (the Guidelines) to determine whether Singleton and Sealed Case may be good policy even if they are bad law
The American criminal justice system is on trial. A chorus of commentators-often but not exclusively...
At trial, defendants are afforded a panoply of rights right to counsel, to proof beyond a reasonable...
In 1987, the Nation’s first attempt to standardize federal sentencing came in the form of the United...
the first section of this essay is devoted to demonstrating the courts\u27 errors. Nonetheless, cons...
This essay begins with a brief analysis of the panel and en banc opinions in Sealed Case and Singlet...
This Article argues that the line of Supreme Court Sixth Amendment jury right cases that began with ...
This essay takes stock of federal sentencing after 2007, the year of the periphery. On Capitol Hill,...
This Article argues that the line of Supreme Court Sixth Amendment jury right cases that began with ...
This is an introductory essay to Volume 23, Number 2, of the FEDERAL SENTENCING REPORTER, which cons...
This Article reflects on the author\u27s professional experience and intellectual evolution in relat...
This essay is an invited response to Professor Ronald Wright\u27s impressive study of the fact that ...
This article offers a historically grounded account of the twists and turns in the Supreme Court\u27...
This Article takes a statistical look at the state of federal sentencing roughly a decade after Unit...
This Article proposes a simplified sentencing table consisting of nine base sentencing ranges, each ...
This article is an elaboration of testimony I gave in February 2012 at a U.S. Sentencing Commission ...
The American criminal justice system is on trial. A chorus of commentators-often but not exclusively...
At trial, defendants are afforded a panoply of rights right to counsel, to proof beyond a reasonable...
In 1987, the Nation’s first attempt to standardize federal sentencing came in the form of the United...
the first section of this essay is devoted to demonstrating the courts\u27 errors. Nonetheless, cons...
This essay begins with a brief analysis of the panel and en banc opinions in Sealed Case and Singlet...
This Article argues that the line of Supreme Court Sixth Amendment jury right cases that began with ...
This essay takes stock of federal sentencing after 2007, the year of the periphery. On Capitol Hill,...
This Article argues that the line of Supreme Court Sixth Amendment jury right cases that began with ...
This is an introductory essay to Volume 23, Number 2, of the FEDERAL SENTENCING REPORTER, which cons...
This Article reflects on the author\u27s professional experience and intellectual evolution in relat...
This essay is an invited response to Professor Ronald Wright\u27s impressive study of the fact that ...
This article offers a historically grounded account of the twists and turns in the Supreme Court\u27...
This Article takes a statistical look at the state of federal sentencing roughly a decade after Unit...
This Article proposes a simplified sentencing table consisting of nine base sentencing ranges, each ...
This article is an elaboration of testimony I gave in February 2012 at a U.S. Sentencing Commission ...
The American criminal justice system is on trial. A chorus of commentators-often but not exclusively...
At trial, defendants are afforded a panoply of rights right to counsel, to proof beyond a reasonable...
In 1987, the Nation’s first attempt to standardize federal sentencing came in the form of the United...