In Crawford v Washington, the Supreme Court substantially changed its understanding of how the Confrontation Clause applies to hearsay evidence. Since then, the Court has issued three bitterly contested expert-evidence-related Confrontation Clause decisions, and each one has generated at least as many questions as answers. This article analyzes this trilogy of cases, especially the most recent, Williams v Illinois. In Williams, the Court issued a bewildering array of opinions in which majority support for admitting the opinion of a DNA analyst about tests that she did not perform was awkwardly knitted together out of several incompatible doctrinal bases. The most prominent and fully developed argument for admission was that the references t...
In Williams v. Illinois, the division of the U.S. Supreme Court created substantial confusion as to ...
This article, part of a symposium on the opinion of the Arizona Supreme Court in Logerquist v. McVey...
In People v. Rawlins and People v. Meekins, the New York Court of Appeals addressed, for the first t...
In Crawford v Washington, the Supreme Court substantially changed its understanding of how the Confr...
Despite the Supreme Court’s efforts in the 2004 Crawford v. Washington case to narrow the parameters...
The United States Supreme Court has decided several cases concerning expert testimony and the Confro...
Modern science forces the world to accept new theories and invention. Science has invented several t...
This Comment examines three recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions dealing with forensic evidence and h...
The Supreme Court recently returned to the Framers\u27 intent behind the Confrontation Clause and ov...
This Essay addresses one of the key evidentiary problems facing courts today: the treatment of foren...
This past term, the U.S. Supreme Court decided the latest in a series of confrontation clause cases ...
As the forensic science industry grows, so do the scandals – overburdened crime labs, unverified sci...
Williams v. Illinois, handed down in 2012, is the latest in a new and revolutionary line of U.S. Sup...
In Crawford v. Washington (2004), the United States Supreme Court radically altered Confrontation Cl...
The Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause ensures that an “accused” in a “criminal prosecution[]” h...
In Williams v. Illinois, the division of the U.S. Supreme Court created substantial confusion as to ...
This article, part of a symposium on the opinion of the Arizona Supreme Court in Logerquist v. McVey...
In People v. Rawlins and People v. Meekins, the New York Court of Appeals addressed, for the first t...
In Crawford v Washington, the Supreme Court substantially changed its understanding of how the Confr...
Despite the Supreme Court’s efforts in the 2004 Crawford v. Washington case to narrow the parameters...
The United States Supreme Court has decided several cases concerning expert testimony and the Confro...
Modern science forces the world to accept new theories and invention. Science has invented several t...
This Comment examines three recent U.S. Supreme Court decisions dealing with forensic evidence and h...
The Supreme Court recently returned to the Framers\u27 intent behind the Confrontation Clause and ov...
This Essay addresses one of the key evidentiary problems facing courts today: the treatment of foren...
This past term, the U.S. Supreme Court decided the latest in a series of confrontation clause cases ...
As the forensic science industry grows, so do the scandals – overburdened crime labs, unverified sci...
Williams v. Illinois, handed down in 2012, is the latest in a new and revolutionary line of U.S. Sup...
In Crawford v. Washington (2004), the United States Supreme Court radically altered Confrontation Cl...
The Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause ensures that an “accused” in a “criminal prosecution[]” h...
In Williams v. Illinois, the division of the U.S. Supreme Court created substantial confusion as to ...
This article, part of a symposium on the opinion of the Arizona Supreme Court in Logerquist v. McVey...
In People v. Rawlins and People v. Meekins, the New York Court of Appeals addressed, for the first t...