The New Orleans criminal justice system collapsed after Hurricane Katrina, resulting in a constitutional crisis. Eight thousand people, mostly indigent and charged with misdemeanors such as public drunkenness or failure to pay traffic tickets, languished indefinitely in state prisons. The court system shut its doors, the police department fell into disarray, few prosecutors remained, and a handful of public defenders could not meet with, much less represent, the thousands detained. This dire situation persisted for many months, long after the system should have been able to recover. We present a narrative of the collapse of the New Orleans area criminal system after Hurricane Katrina. Not only did this perfect storm illuminate how unprepare...
Abstract Hurricane Katrina impacted the Gulf Coast of the USA on a scale and intensity that was unpr...
The attacks of September 11 prompted a historic debate concerning terrorism and domestic emergency r...
This case study demonstrates the design suggested for modern court technology systems. The design an...
The New Orleans criminal justice system collapsed after Hurricane Katrina, resulting in a constituti...
The New Orleans criminal justice system collapsed after Hurricane Katrina, resulting in a constituti...
Hurricane Katrina was one of the worst natural disasters ever to strike the United States, in terms ...
When Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans and the levees protecting the city gave way in August 2005...
This book chapter explores the Katrina response effort to illustrate the governmental decision-makin...
This paper advocates an expanded reading of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to in...
This Article explores one Katrina-law problem: the plight of the poor, unrepresented and uncharged p...
The effect of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans was catastrophic and longlasting. Katrina is the cost...
This article analyzes how the government's blame of the Posse Comitatus Act (PCA) for its late respo...
In 2018’s Saint Bernard Parish Government v. United States, Federal Appeals Judge Timothy Dyk revers...
In the days following Hurricane Katrina, as lawlessness and violence spread throughout New Orleans, ...
Two broad categories of constitutional models have traditionally been invoked in the context of fash...
Abstract Hurricane Katrina impacted the Gulf Coast of the USA on a scale and intensity that was unpr...
The attacks of September 11 prompted a historic debate concerning terrorism and domestic emergency r...
This case study demonstrates the design suggested for modern court technology systems. The design an...
The New Orleans criminal justice system collapsed after Hurricane Katrina, resulting in a constituti...
The New Orleans criminal justice system collapsed after Hurricane Katrina, resulting in a constituti...
Hurricane Katrina was one of the worst natural disasters ever to strike the United States, in terms ...
When Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans and the levees protecting the city gave way in August 2005...
This book chapter explores the Katrina response effort to illustrate the governmental decision-makin...
This paper advocates an expanded reading of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to in...
This Article explores one Katrina-law problem: the plight of the poor, unrepresented and uncharged p...
The effect of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans was catastrophic and longlasting. Katrina is the cost...
This article analyzes how the government's blame of the Posse Comitatus Act (PCA) for its late respo...
In 2018’s Saint Bernard Parish Government v. United States, Federal Appeals Judge Timothy Dyk revers...
In the days following Hurricane Katrina, as lawlessness and violence spread throughout New Orleans, ...
Two broad categories of constitutional models have traditionally been invoked in the context of fash...
Abstract Hurricane Katrina impacted the Gulf Coast of the USA on a scale and intensity that was unpr...
The attacks of September 11 prompted a historic debate concerning terrorism and domestic emergency r...
This case study demonstrates the design suggested for modern court technology systems. The design an...