White collar crime cases produce a curious paradox in Supreme Court jurisprudence: in a substantial number of the Court\u27s leading white collar criminal cases, ranging from insider trading to political corruption cases, the liberal justices have voted to affirm convictions, and the conservative justices to reverse them. Even more frequently, these cases have produced strange alliances among the liberals and conservatives, who rarely split into such groupings in non-white collar criminal cases. And it is not merely votes and alliances that change in white collar cases; judicial philosophies, attitudes, and rhetoric transmogrify into a veritable twilight zone of Supreme Court criminal law jurisprudence. The common view of the Court\u27s...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...
This is the author's final and accepted version of the article, post refereeing. Publisher's version...
Since the turn of the century, sentencing research has consistently shown that certain aspects of th...
The question of whether ‘white collar’ crimes are treated more leniently by society dates to the fir...
Criminal procedure has undergone several well-documented shifts in its doctrinal foundations since t...
Much public commentary has asserted or implied that the American criminal-justice system unjustly pr...
Overcriminalization takes many forms and impacts the American criminal justice system in varying way...
While sociologist have long debated the relationship between the status characteristics of criminal ...
In contrast to the standard conception of a U.S. Supreme Court striving to produce ideologically opt...
Overall, the criminal cases from this term illustrate that the justices are not uniformly polarized ...
White collar crime is the term used to describe financially driven, nonviolent crimes committed by p...
Although the total number of incoming cases at the federal-level in 2013 was over 350,000, the total...
This Article canvases the Burger Court’s counterrevolution in criminal procedure effectuated by a se...
The history of white-collar and corporate crime in our nation has been one of toleration. Throughout...
Most of the judges in America are elected. Yet the institution of the elected judiciary is in troubl...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...
This is the author's final and accepted version of the article, post refereeing. Publisher's version...
Since the turn of the century, sentencing research has consistently shown that certain aspects of th...
The question of whether ‘white collar’ crimes are treated more leniently by society dates to the fir...
Criminal procedure has undergone several well-documented shifts in its doctrinal foundations since t...
Much public commentary has asserted or implied that the American criminal-justice system unjustly pr...
Overcriminalization takes many forms and impacts the American criminal justice system in varying way...
While sociologist have long debated the relationship between the status characteristics of criminal ...
In contrast to the standard conception of a U.S. Supreme Court striving to produce ideologically opt...
Overall, the criminal cases from this term illustrate that the justices are not uniformly polarized ...
White collar crime is the term used to describe financially driven, nonviolent crimes committed by p...
Although the total number of incoming cases at the federal-level in 2013 was over 350,000, the total...
This Article canvases the Burger Court’s counterrevolution in criminal procedure effectuated by a se...
The history of white-collar and corporate crime in our nation has been one of toleration. Throughout...
Most of the judges in America are elected. Yet the institution of the elected judiciary is in troubl...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...
This is the author's final and accepted version of the article, post refereeing. Publisher's version...
Since the turn of the century, sentencing research has consistently shown that certain aspects of th...