This article discusses how courts have handled the remedy dilemma presented by unfulfillable plea bargains. Part I analyzes the seminal Supreme Court opinion on the broken plea bargain question, Santobello v. New York. This section concludes that choice-of-remedy is not entirely a matter of lower court discretion. Rather, Santobello delegates to lower courts the authority to develop a law of remedies which conforms to the underlying principles of that decision. Part I also focuses on what courts have done with this mandate, discussing the elements of decision courts have developed to remedy unfulfillable plea bargains. Finally, Part II suggests a model analysis, requiring a presumption of specific performance when the defendant can show de...
In two recent cases, Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that criminal...
This symposium article responds to the question, what\u27s left of the law in the wake of ADR? The a...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
Last year, in Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, a five-to-four majority of the Supreme Court he...
The U.S. Supreme Court estimates that at least ninety percent of criminal convictions are based on g...
In the 2012 companion cases of Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, the United States Supreme Cour...
A common misconception of the American criminal justice system is the belief that an accused may on...
In two recent decisions, the United States Supreme Court moved further in the direction of at least ...
Plea bargaining in the United States is in critical respects unregulated, and a key reason is the ma...
The myth of American exceptionalism in the matter of plea-bargaining is certainly by now quite untru...
Courts in common law countries reject plea-agreements only when the agreed upon sentence is seen as ...
After four decades of neglecting laissez-faire plea bargaining, the Supreme Court got it right. In ...
This paper analyzes plea bargaining and plea negotiation in the American judicial system. Plea barga...
This article compares the Court\u27s reasoning in plea bargaining cases with its reasoning in non-pl...
In the federal criminal justice system, plea bargaining remains the predominant method for disposing...
In two recent cases, Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that criminal...
This symposium article responds to the question, what\u27s left of the law in the wake of ADR? The a...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
Last year, in Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, a five-to-four majority of the Supreme Court he...
The U.S. Supreme Court estimates that at least ninety percent of criminal convictions are based on g...
In the 2012 companion cases of Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, the United States Supreme Cour...
A common misconception of the American criminal justice system is the belief that an accused may on...
In two recent decisions, the United States Supreme Court moved further in the direction of at least ...
Plea bargaining in the United States is in critical respects unregulated, and a key reason is the ma...
The myth of American exceptionalism in the matter of plea-bargaining is certainly by now quite untru...
Courts in common law countries reject plea-agreements only when the agreed upon sentence is seen as ...
After four decades of neglecting laissez-faire plea bargaining, the Supreme Court got it right. In ...
This paper analyzes plea bargaining and plea negotiation in the American judicial system. Plea barga...
This article compares the Court\u27s reasoning in plea bargaining cases with its reasoning in non-pl...
In the federal criminal justice system, plea bargaining remains the predominant method for disposing...
In two recent cases, Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that criminal...
This symposium article responds to the question, what\u27s left of the law in the wake of ADR? The a...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...