Much of the literature on federal criminal law bemoans the extent to which Congress has abdicated its legislative responsibilities and left enforcement decisions to prosecutorial discretion. Many critics have sought to compensate for the absence of appropriate legislative specificity by proposing other devices for limiting prosecutorial power, many of which would centralize enforcer authority. Guided by recent work in positive political theory, Professor Daniel Richman argues that such claims of legislative abdication overlook the attention that Congress has given to the organization and activities of the federal enforcement bureaucracy. By showing the extent to which Congress balances concern with enforcer accountability against suspicion ...
On November 20, 2014, President Obama, frustrated by congressional inaction on immigration, announce...
The federalization of criminal law arguably threatens the states’ traditional police powers. Congres...
It is beyond peradventure that American prosecutors have ple-nary charging discretion in criminal ca...
Much of the literature on federal criminal law bemoans the extent to which Congress has abdicated it...
This essay – written for the annual Duke Law Journal Administrative Law Symposium – explores the mec...
This Essay explores the mechanisms of control over federal criminal enforcement that the administrat...
Although the Constitution confers the legislative power on Congress, Congress does not make most law...
On a daily basis, prosecutors decide whether and how to charge individuals for alleged criminal cond...
Not since the Nixon presidency has the issue of the professional neutrality and independence of fede...
A strategy for regaining control of federal criminal law, the reallocation of interpretive criminal ...
This article supports constraint of the modern federal criminal law regime through greater attention...
Prosecutors are the most powerful officials in the American criminal justice system. The decisions t...
This Article proposes possible legislative reforms to Congress’s exercise of its contempt power in c...
When the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) sued Facebook in early December, it did not level criminal c...
A vast literature in law and political theory focuses on questions of accountability and independenc...
On November 20, 2014, President Obama, frustrated by congressional inaction on immigration, announce...
The federalization of criminal law arguably threatens the states’ traditional police powers. Congres...
It is beyond peradventure that American prosecutors have ple-nary charging discretion in criminal ca...
Much of the literature on federal criminal law bemoans the extent to which Congress has abdicated it...
This essay – written for the annual Duke Law Journal Administrative Law Symposium – explores the mec...
This Essay explores the mechanisms of control over federal criminal enforcement that the administrat...
Although the Constitution confers the legislative power on Congress, Congress does not make most law...
On a daily basis, prosecutors decide whether and how to charge individuals for alleged criminal cond...
Not since the Nixon presidency has the issue of the professional neutrality and independence of fede...
A strategy for regaining control of federal criminal law, the reallocation of interpretive criminal ...
This article supports constraint of the modern federal criminal law regime through greater attention...
Prosecutors are the most powerful officials in the American criminal justice system. The decisions t...
This Article proposes possible legislative reforms to Congress’s exercise of its contempt power in c...
When the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) sued Facebook in early December, it did not level criminal c...
A vast literature in law and political theory focuses on questions of accountability and independenc...
On November 20, 2014, President Obama, frustrated by congressional inaction on immigration, announce...
The federalization of criminal law arguably threatens the states’ traditional police powers. Congres...
It is beyond peradventure that American prosecutors have ple-nary charging discretion in criminal ca...