Part I of this Note argues that the Thompson, Logan, and Hicks cases can be read narrowly to deal primarily with concern about protecting specific constitutional guarantees such as criminal procedural protections, equal protection guarantees, and first amendment freedoms. Arguably, in order to avoid dealing explicitly with the broader constitutional questions raised by the state decisions, the Court reversed the state decisions as arbitrary interpretations of state law. Part II argues that the rule against arbitrary state decisions suggested by Thompson, Logan, and Hicks is incompatible with federalism because it interferes with states\u27 ability to develop law over state law matters, to make final decisions over state law issues, and to d...
Hidden underneath the racy death penalty issues in Kansas v. Marsh lurks a seemingly dull procedural...
This article discusses the appropriate standard of review a federal habeas court should use to revie...
Parratt v. Taylor is among the most puzzling Supreme Court decisions of the last decade, and the low...
Part I of this Note argues that the Thompson, Logan, and Hicks cases can be read narrowly to deal pr...
This article addresses the Burger Supreme Court’s approach to federalism and concludes that the Cour...
In exercising appellate jurisdiction over federal questions raised in the highest court of a state, ...
This Commentary argues that the Court decided New York v. United States incorrectly. The Court faile...
The Supreme Court of the United States granted plaintiff\u27s petition for certiorari to review a de...
In Williams v. Taylor, the United States Supreme Court held that federal habeas courts may not grant...
The American judicial system is founded on several policies which act as guideposts for the courts. ...
In a recent decision the Supreme Court has halted the prior trend of increasing the scope of federal...
Abstract: We know from Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins that unless the Constitution or a federal statute p...
Sometimes the United States Supreme Court speaks, and states do not follow. For example, in 2003, th...
The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit held that a federal district court in Ohio was no...
When a federal court is asked to declare an uninterpreted state law to be unconstitutionally overbro...
Hidden underneath the racy death penalty issues in Kansas v. Marsh lurks a seemingly dull procedural...
This article discusses the appropriate standard of review a federal habeas court should use to revie...
Parratt v. Taylor is among the most puzzling Supreme Court decisions of the last decade, and the low...
Part I of this Note argues that the Thompson, Logan, and Hicks cases can be read narrowly to deal pr...
This article addresses the Burger Supreme Court’s approach to federalism and concludes that the Cour...
In exercising appellate jurisdiction over federal questions raised in the highest court of a state, ...
This Commentary argues that the Court decided New York v. United States incorrectly. The Court faile...
The Supreme Court of the United States granted plaintiff\u27s petition for certiorari to review a de...
In Williams v. Taylor, the United States Supreme Court held that federal habeas courts may not grant...
The American judicial system is founded on several policies which act as guideposts for the courts. ...
In a recent decision the Supreme Court has halted the prior trend of increasing the scope of federal...
Abstract: We know from Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins that unless the Constitution or a federal statute p...
Sometimes the United States Supreme Court speaks, and states do not follow. For example, in 2003, th...
The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit held that a federal district court in Ohio was no...
When a federal court is asked to declare an uninterpreted state law to be unconstitutionally overbro...
Hidden underneath the racy death penalty issues in Kansas v. Marsh lurks a seemingly dull procedural...
This article discusses the appropriate standard of review a federal habeas court should use to revie...
Parratt v. Taylor is among the most puzzling Supreme Court decisions of the last decade, and the low...