In this Article, Professor Nancy King develops an approach for determining when judges should block the efforts of criminal litigants to bypass constitutional and statutory requirements other than those already traded freely in traditional plea bargains. Devices for classifying nonnegotiable requirements, including the concept of jurisdictional error, have lost their utility. Clearer rules about which deals are enforceable and which are not would increase certainty in bargaining and reduce disparate treatment of similarly situated defendants. King argues that the interests of third parties or the public may justify restrictions on bargains in criminal procedure, and she traces the stubborn persistence of barriers to free trade in rights a...
The proposed amendments to the ABA Criminal Justice Standards for Prosecutors and Defense Lawyers ( ...
As the staggering costs of the criminal justice system continue to rise, states have begun to look f...
This article, the most comprehensive study of judicial participation in plea negotiations since the ...
In this Article, Professor Nancy King develops an approach for determining when judges should block ...
In this article, to work towards decreasing bias in plea bargaining, I propose a structural fix and ...
The ubiquity of plea bargaining creates real concern that innocent defendants are occasionally, or p...
The vast majority of federal criminal defendants resolve their cases by plea bargaining, with minima...
Consider what plea bargains would be like if legal rules were taken more seriously than they current...
American criminal procedure developed on the assumption that grand juries and petit jury trials were...
Padilla v. Kentucky was a watershed in the Court’s turn to regulating plea bargaining. For decades, ...
This article compares the Court\u27s reasoning in plea bargaining cases with its reasoning in non-pl...
In his dissenting opinion in Ricketts v. Adamson, Justice Brennan proposed the idea of plea agreemen...
In Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that plea bargaining, although ...
Scholarship on negotiation theory and practice is rich and well-developed. Almost no work has been d...
lea bargaining is the dominant method by which our criminal justice system resolves cases. More than...
The proposed amendments to the ABA Criminal Justice Standards for Prosecutors and Defense Lawyers ( ...
As the staggering costs of the criminal justice system continue to rise, states have begun to look f...
This article, the most comprehensive study of judicial participation in plea negotiations since the ...
In this Article, Professor Nancy King develops an approach for determining when judges should block ...
In this article, to work towards decreasing bias in plea bargaining, I propose a structural fix and ...
The ubiquity of plea bargaining creates real concern that innocent defendants are occasionally, or p...
The vast majority of federal criminal defendants resolve their cases by plea bargaining, with minima...
Consider what plea bargains would be like if legal rules were taken more seriously than they current...
American criminal procedure developed on the assumption that grand juries and petit jury trials were...
Padilla v. Kentucky was a watershed in the Court’s turn to regulating plea bargaining. For decades, ...
This article compares the Court\u27s reasoning in plea bargaining cases with its reasoning in non-pl...
In his dissenting opinion in Ricketts v. Adamson, Justice Brennan proposed the idea of plea agreemen...
In Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that plea bargaining, although ...
Scholarship on negotiation theory and practice is rich and well-developed. Almost no work has been d...
lea bargaining is the dominant method by which our criminal justice system resolves cases. More than...
The proposed amendments to the ABA Criminal Justice Standards for Prosecutors and Defense Lawyers ( ...
As the staggering costs of the criminal justice system continue to rise, states have begun to look f...
This article, the most comprehensive study of judicial participation in plea negotiations since the ...