In Blanton v. City of North Las Vegas, the Supreme Court set forth the definitive standard for distinguishing petty offenses from serious crimes.7 The benchmark used by the Court is the maximum prison term assigned to each offense by the legislature. Where the penalty exceeds six months\u27 imprisonment, the offense is serious enough to trigger the right to jury trial. Where the penalty is six months\u27 imprisonment or less, there is a strong presumption that the offense is petty; therefore, a defendant accused of that offense has no Sixth Amendment right to jury trial. This Note argues that a criminal defendant accused of multiple offenses has no Sixth Amendment right to jury trial unless one or more of the offenses - considered individua...
Is a criminal defendant who discharges a weapon five times in rapid succession guilty of one crime o...
The Sixth Amendment guarantees criminal defendants a trial before a jury. Until the Supreme Court de...
Do the Sixth Amendment rights to appointed counsel and jury trial unconstitutionally conflict with d...
In Blanton v. City of North Las Vegas, the Supreme Court set forth the definitive standard for disti...
This Note outlines the history and development of the petty offense exception and the Supreme Court\...
The author discusses the trial of petty offenses by federal magistrates under the newly promulgated ...
This Article is, in effect, the second half of the author\u27s argument against the Supreme Court\u2...
The right to trial by jury in criminal cases is basic to the design of American criminal justice and...
In an exercise of the discretionary rule-making authority over the lower federal courts, the Supreme...
The Founding Fathers thought the jury-trial right was so fundamental to our system of justice that t...
Federal courts historically have had the power to try criminal contempt cases without a jury. There ...
In Blakely v. Washington, the United States Supreme Court held that Washington\u27s state criminal s...
Whether or not the judge in a criminal trial is required to charge the jury on a lesser included off...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
Is a criminal defendant who discharges a weapon five times in rapid succession guilty of one crime o...
The Sixth Amendment guarantees criminal defendants a trial before a jury. Until the Supreme Court de...
Do the Sixth Amendment rights to appointed counsel and jury trial unconstitutionally conflict with d...
In Blanton v. City of North Las Vegas, the Supreme Court set forth the definitive standard for disti...
This Note outlines the history and development of the petty offense exception and the Supreme Court\...
The author discusses the trial of petty offenses by federal magistrates under the newly promulgated ...
This Article is, in effect, the second half of the author\u27s argument against the Supreme Court\u2...
The right to trial by jury in criminal cases is basic to the design of American criminal justice and...
In an exercise of the discretionary rule-making authority over the lower federal courts, the Supreme...
The Founding Fathers thought the jury-trial right was so fundamental to our system of justice that t...
Federal courts historically have had the power to try criminal contempt cases without a jury. There ...
In Blakely v. Washington, the United States Supreme Court held that Washington\u27s state criminal s...
Whether or not the judge in a criminal trial is required to charge the jury on a lesser included off...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
Is a criminal defendant who discharges a weapon five times in rapid succession guilty of one crime o...
The Sixth Amendment guarantees criminal defendants a trial before a jury. Until the Supreme Court de...
Do the Sixth Amendment rights to appointed counsel and jury trial unconstitutionally conflict with d...