This article, echoing Highmore\u27s treatise of 1783, maintains that neither a legitimate nor a very important governmental interest can justify preventive detention in the absence of significant proof of past wrongdoing or an inability to control one\u27s behavior. Both the Supreme Court\u27s neglect of this issue and Congress\u27 similar neglect in the preventive detention provisions of the Federal Bail Reform Act of 1984 reveal the extent to which cost-benefit analysis has captured American law and threatened core concepts of individual dignity. The article does not oppose all forms of preventive pretrial detention. To the contrary, it recognizes that the detention without bond of a person accused of crime can be consistent with Anglo-Am...
(Excerpt) This Article analyzes each of those decisions and, by way of two hypothetical cases, addre...
There are few issues in criminal law with greater momentum than bail reform. In the last three years...
Part I of this Article briefly summarizes the origin and judicial development of substantive due pro...
This article, echoing Highmore\u27s treatise of 1783, maintains that neither a legitimate nor a very...
The Due Process Clause is a central tenet of criminal law\u27s constitutional canon. Yet defining pr...
On March 9, 2018, the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit held, in Dawson v. Board ...
Bail reform is happening. Across the country, jurisdictions are beginning to recognize that contempo...
This is the published version.Our constitutional form of government is a delicate balance between tw...
An unaffordable bail requirement has precisely the same effect as an order of pretrial detention: th...
The Due Process Clause prohibits all punishment of pretrial detainees- individuals that are held b...
Prolonged pretrial detention poses one of the greatest unchecked threats to due process in the Unite...
This Article shows how the application of a takings paradigm to pretrial detention can mitigate the ...
(Excerpt) This Article’s disagreement with the courts is over a serious issue. Granting bail to a pe...
The issue of pretrial detention is part of a larger, national conversation on criminal justice refor...
How dangerous must a person be to justify the state in locking her up for the greater good? The bail...
(Excerpt) This Article analyzes each of those decisions and, by way of two hypothetical cases, addre...
There are few issues in criminal law with greater momentum than bail reform. In the last three years...
Part I of this Article briefly summarizes the origin and judicial development of substantive due pro...
This article, echoing Highmore\u27s treatise of 1783, maintains that neither a legitimate nor a very...
The Due Process Clause is a central tenet of criminal law\u27s constitutional canon. Yet defining pr...
On March 9, 2018, the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit held, in Dawson v. Board ...
Bail reform is happening. Across the country, jurisdictions are beginning to recognize that contempo...
This is the published version.Our constitutional form of government is a delicate balance between tw...
An unaffordable bail requirement has precisely the same effect as an order of pretrial detention: th...
The Due Process Clause prohibits all punishment of pretrial detainees- individuals that are held b...
Prolonged pretrial detention poses one of the greatest unchecked threats to due process in the Unite...
This Article shows how the application of a takings paradigm to pretrial detention can mitigate the ...
(Excerpt) This Article’s disagreement with the courts is over a serious issue. Granting bail to a pe...
The issue of pretrial detention is part of a larger, national conversation on criminal justice refor...
How dangerous must a person be to justify the state in locking her up for the greater good? The bail...
(Excerpt) This Article analyzes each of those decisions and, by way of two hypothetical cases, addre...
There are few issues in criminal law with greater momentum than bail reform. In the last three years...
Part I of this Article briefly summarizes the origin and judicial development of substantive due pro...