Alexandra Natapoff, in her outstanding new book, Snitching: Criminal Informants and the Erosion of American Justice, makes a compelling case for reform of the system by which we regulate police use of criminal informants. Indeed, as other writers have discussed, law enforcement\u27s overreliance on such informants has led to a snitching culture in which informant snitching replaces other forms of law enforcement investigation (pp. 12, 31, 88-89). Yet snitches, especially jailhouse snitches, are notoriously unreliable
This Article argues that the Court\u27s current interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, which sancti...
This article challenges the adequacy of the existing legal and regulatory framework governing inform...
Since DNA testing became available in the late 1980’s, there have been approximately 285 DNA exonera...
This Comment briefly surveys in Part I some of the data on snitch-generated wrongful convictions. In...
The police have long relied on informants to make critical cases, and prosecutors have long relied o...
Informants are witnesses who often testify in exchange for an incentive (i.e. jailhouse informant, c...
Informants have long been used in American criminal law enforcement. Informants are often the best, ...
Fabricated testimony by informants often plays an important role in convictions of the innocent. In ...
It is well-known that undercover investigations influence and sometimes distort the crimes they seek...
Following the murder of Rachel Morningstar Hoffman—a 23-year old college graduate—Florida passed “Ra...
Review of Alexandra Natapoff\u27s Punishment Without Crime: How Our Massive Misdemeanor System Traps...
Although misdemeanors comprise an overwhelming majority of state criminal court cases, little judici...
These are boom times for the sellers and buyers of cooperation in the federal criminal justice syste...
An incentivized informant scandal recently hit Orange County, California where county officials were...
The government’s use of children as informants in America’s \u27wars\u27 on drugs, crime, and gang...
This Article argues that the Court\u27s current interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, which sancti...
This article challenges the adequacy of the existing legal and regulatory framework governing inform...
Since DNA testing became available in the late 1980’s, there have been approximately 285 DNA exonera...
This Comment briefly surveys in Part I some of the data on snitch-generated wrongful convictions. In...
The police have long relied on informants to make critical cases, and prosecutors have long relied o...
Informants are witnesses who often testify in exchange for an incentive (i.e. jailhouse informant, c...
Informants have long been used in American criminal law enforcement. Informants are often the best, ...
Fabricated testimony by informants often plays an important role in convictions of the innocent. In ...
It is well-known that undercover investigations influence and sometimes distort the crimes they seek...
Following the murder of Rachel Morningstar Hoffman—a 23-year old college graduate—Florida passed “Ra...
Review of Alexandra Natapoff\u27s Punishment Without Crime: How Our Massive Misdemeanor System Traps...
Although misdemeanors comprise an overwhelming majority of state criminal court cases, little judici...
These are boom times for the sellers and buyers of cooperation in the federal criminal justice syste...
An incentivized informant scandal recently hit Orange County, California where county officials were...
The government’s use of children as informants in America’s \u27wars\u27 on drugs, crime, and gang...
This Article argues that the Court\u27s current interpretation of the Fourth Amendment, which sancti...
This article challenges the adequacy of the existing legal and regulatory framework governing inform...
Since DNA testing became available in the late 1980’s, there have been approximately 285 DNA exonera...