For the past eighty years, the entrapment doctrine has provided a legal defense for defendants facing federal prosecution, but only for those lacking criminal “predisposition” prior to the government’s inducement. The peculiar contours of this doctrine have generated significant academic debate, yet this scholarship has failed to explain why the entrapment doctrine developed as it did in the first instance. This Article addresses this gap by examining competing views on criminality and punishment in America during the doctrine’s emergence, highlighting the significant, though largely forgotten, impact of positivist criminology on the early twentieth-century legal imagination. Though positivism has long since been discredited as a criminolog...
While the United States Supreme Court has developed an elaborate constitutional jurisprudence of cri...
Many the states currently use a version of the entrapment defense known as the “objective test,” whi...
Essay on philosophical problems with police sting operations and the legal doctrine of entrapment
For the past eighty years, the entrapment doctrine has provided a legal defense for defendants facin...
Now in our second decade after 9/11, we are firmly in the prevention era of law enforcement. Faced w...
In Jacobson v. United States, the Supreme Court narrowed the types of evidence that the prosecution ...
The defense of entrapment is unique since the defendant necessarily concedes the commission of a cri...
Since 1932, the defense of entrapment has been firmly established in the federal courts; however, th...
The task of this Article is to assess the competing approaches that circuit courts have taken in def...
Certain types of criminal activity are consensual and covert. Hence they are virtually undetectable ...
Paul Marcus has produced an extremely thorough article on the intriguing and complex defense of entr...
The federal law of procedure in entrapment cases is in profound disarray. Despite four attempts over...
Part I of this Article surveys the development of the competing threads of entrapment theory. Part I...
In the United States, a criminal defendant can show himself to be not guilty of the crime of which h...
The ever increasing rise in so-called victimless crimes has been accompanied by a corresponding incr...
While the United States Supreme Court has developed an elaborate constitutional jurisprudence of cri...
Many the states currently use a version of the entrapment defense known as the “objective test,” whi...
Essay on philosophical problems with police sting operations and the legal doctrine of entrapment
For the past eighty years, the entrapment doctrine has provided a legal defense for defendants facin...
Now in our second decade after 9/11, we are firmly in the prevention era of law enforcement. Faced w...
In Jacobson v. United States, the Supreme Court narrowed the types of evidence that the prosecution ...
The defense of entrapment is unique since the defendant necessarily concedes the commission of a cri...
Since 1932, the defense of entrapment has been firmly established in the federal courts; however, th...
The task of this Article is to assess the competing approaches that circuit courts have taken in def...
Certain types of criminal activity are consensual and covert. Hence they are virtually undetectable ...
Paul Marcus has produced an extremely thorough article on the intriguing and complex defense of entr...
The federal law of procedure in entrapment cases is in profound disarray. Despite four attempts over...
Part I of this Article surveys the development of the competing threads of entrapment theory. Part I...
In the United States, a criminal defendant can show himself to be not guilty of the crime of which h...
The ever increasing rise in so-called victimless crimes has been accompanied by a corresponding incr...
While the United States Supreme Court has developed an elaborate constitutional jurisprudence of cri...
Many the states currently use a version of the entrapment defense known as the “objective test,” whi...
Essay on philosophical problems with police sting operations and the legal doctrine of entrapment