Every now and then a case ·comes along that tests the fundamental premises of a body of law. United States v. DiFrancesco presents such a test to the law of double jeopardy, raising the question whether the government may unilaterally appeal a defendant\u27s criminal sentence for the purpose of increasing the sentence. The question cannot be answered by facile reference to the text of the fifth amendment, because the terms of the double jeopardy clause are not self-defining. Nor can it be settled by reference to history, because the issue has not arisen with any frequency until now
Modern Supreme Court case law is full of double jeopardy double talk. Consider first the poetic phra...
This Article proposes to clarify this area of criminal practice. California Penal Code § 1023, prohi...
The Virginia Constitution provides: That in criminal prosecutions a man . . . shall not . . . be pu...
In the landmark decision of United States v. DiFrancesco, the Supreme Court, in a five-to-four decis...
This Recent Development first traces the evolution of the double jeopardy doctrine. The Recent Devel...
As part of a continuing series of papers on impediments to the search for truth in criminal investig...
Familiar to most Americans, the double jeopardy clause (the clause) of the Fifth Amendment to the Un...
The statute allowing the government to appeal from some forms of trial court defeat in criminal case...
Although founding its decision upon the present inapplicability of the double jeopardy clause to the...
In Benton v. Maryland, decided in June of this year, the Supreme Court explicitly extended fifth ame...
This Note argues that the rationale of the Supreme Court\u27s post-conviction cases cannot be extend...
A preview of two 1996 Supreme Court cases. In the first case, US v. Ursery, a convicted narcotics de...
This Note argues that once the defendant raises a nonfrivolous double jeopardy claim that turns on a...
The United States Supreme Court held that when relevant conduct is used to increase an accused\u27s ...
This Article will attempt to distill from this confusion a meaningful double jeopardy policy, applic...
Modern Supreme Court case law is full of double jeopardy double talk. Consider first the poetic phra...
This Article proposes to clarify this area of criminal practice. California Penal Code § 1023, prohi...
The Virginia Constitution provides: That in criminal prosecutions a man . . . shall not . . . be pu...
In the landmark decision of United States v. DiFrancesco, the Supreme Court, in a five-to-four decis...
This Recent Development first traces the evolution of the double jeopardy doctrine. The Recent Devel...
As part of a continuing series of papers on impediments to the search for truth in criminal investig...
Familiar to most Americans, the double jeopardy clause (the clause) of the Fifth Amendment to the Un...
The statute allowing the government to appeal from some forms of trial court defeat in criminal case...
Although founding its decision upon the present inapplicability of the double jeopardy clause to the...
In Benton v. Maryland, decided in June of this year, the Supreme Court explicitly extended fifth ame...
This Note argues that the rationale of the Supreme Court\u27s post-conviction cases cannot be extend...
A preview of two 1996 Supreme Court cases. In the first case, US v. Ursery, a convicted narcotics de...
This Note argues that once the defendant raises a nonfrivolous double jeopardy claim that turns on a...
The United States Supreme Court held that when relevant conduct is used to increase an accused\u27s ...
This Article will attempt to distill from this confusion a meaningful double jeopardy policy, applic...
Modern Supreme Court case law is full of double jeopardy double talk. Consider first the poetic phra...
This Article proposes to clarify this area of criminal practice. California Penal Code § 1023, prohi...
The Virginia Constitution provides: That in criminal prosecutions a man . . . shall not . . . be pu...