After the exoneration of more than 200 people based on post-conviction DNA evidence, a growing movement against wrongful convictions has called increased attention to the prosecutorial suppression of material exculpatory evidence. Commentators frequently study prosecutorial failures to disclose as a form of intentional misconduct, coloring both the description of the problem and the recommended solutions. This Article, in contrast, explores how even ethical prosecutors might fail to disclose exculpatory evidence because off laws in the Brady doctrine itself-specifically, the Court\u27s limitation of the doctrine to material exculpatory evidence. The materiality standard amplifies cognitive biases that distort even an ethical prosecutor\u2...
By any measure, Brady v. Maryland has not lived up to its expectations. Brady\u27s announcement of a...
Fifty years after Brady v. Maryland, defense attorneys around the United States continue to struggle...
Why not criminal discovery? This question has been posited by legal scholars and learned jurists ali...
After the exoneration of more than 200 people based on post-conviction DNA evidence, a growing movem...
Mandatory disclosure of evidence (the so-called Brady rule) is considered to be among the most impor...
In this article, the author proposes that the prosecution’s obligation to disclose exculpatory infor...
Prosecutorial misconduct in the form of Brady violations continues to plague the criminal justice sy...
The government’s duty to disclose favorable evidence to the defense under Brady v. Maryland has beco...
The Supreme Court’s decision in Brady v. Maryland presented prosecutors with new professional challe...
Part I of this Article describes the evolution of the Brady rule over the past forty-three years. Pa...
The Supreme Court in Kyles v. Whitley affirmed the prosecutor\u27s duty under Brady v. Maryland to d...
Brady v. Maryland imposes a disclosure obligation on the prosecutor and, for this reason, is underst...
This Article addresses the intersection of the rule of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and AB...
In a criminal justice system where guilty pleas are the norm and trials the rare exception, the issu...
A leading cause of wrongful conviction and wasteful litigation in criminal cases is the nondisclosur...
By any measure, Brady v. Maryland has not lived up to its expectations. Brady\u27s announcement of a...
Fifty years after Brady v. Maryland, defense attorneys around the United States continue to struggle...
Why not criminal discovery? This question has been posited by legal scholars and learned jurists ali...
After the exoneration of more than 200 people based on post-conviction DNA evidence, a growing movem...
Mandatory disclosure of evidence (the so-called Brady rule) is considered to be among the most impor...
In this article, the author proposes that the prosecution’s obligation to disclose exculpatory infor...
Prosecutorial misconduct in the form of Brady violations continues to plague the criminal justice sy...
The government’s duty to disclose favorable evidence to the defense under Brady v. Maryland has beco...
The Supreme Court’s decision in Brady v. Maryland presented prosecutors with new professional challe...
Part I of this Article describes the evolution of the Brady rule over the past forty-three years. Pa...
The Supreme Court in Kyles v. Whitley affirmed the prosecutor\u27s duty under Brady v. Maryland to d...
Brady v. Maryland imposes a disclosure obligation on the prosecutor and, for this reason, is underst...
This Article addresses the intersection of the rule of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), and AB...
In a criminal justice system where guilty pleas are the norm and trials the rare exception, the issu...
A leading cause of wrongful conviction and wasteful litigation in criminal cases is the nondisclosur...
By any measure, Brady v. Maryland has not lived up to its expectations. Brady\u27s announcement of a...
Fifty years after Brady v. Maryland, defense attorneys around the United States continue to struggle...
Why not criminal discovery? This question has been posited by legal scholars and learned jurists ali...