“If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you.” Since Miranda v. Arizona, that popularized phrase has widely been regarded as true in the United States. However, because the Bill of Rights does not apply to Native American tribes, defendants in tribal courts are regularly sentenced to imprisonment without the aid of counsel. One of those defendants was Michael Bryant, who has several convictions for domestic assault and was not appointed counsel even though he was indigent and imprisoned. Domestic assault is a terrible problem in Native American communities. Native American women suffer from domestic violence at higher rates than any other racial group. In an effort to reduce domestic violence in the tribes, Congress crim...
In February of 2014, a grand jury returned an indictment charging William Kirkaldie with domestic ab...
Domestic violence is a severe problem for tribes across the nation, as their female members are vict...
This article critiques a proposal to include tribal court criminal convictions and sentences in the ...
“If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you.” Since Miranda v. Arizona, that po...
The epidemic of domestic violence committed against Native American women and the jurisdictional maz...
Concerns about the reliability of criminal justice systems in foreign countries have resulted in une...
If tribal courts provided competent counsel to indigent Indian defendants, Creel said, Then I would...
June 13 of this year marked a milestone in constitutional law. Fifty years earlier, in 1966, the Sup...
On July 6, 2011, in United States v. Cavanaugh, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit hel...
Native American Indians charged in tribal court criminal proceedings are not entitled to court appoi...
Domestic violence has riddled the indigenous communities of the United States for decades. Within th...
State and federal courts increasingly are being confronted with prosecutors moving the court to cons...
Indian tribes in the United States are separate sovereigns with inherent self-governing authority. A...
Part I of this article is a history and analysis of the federal constitutional right to effective as...
A defendant in state and federal courts is entitled to a constitutional protection against self-incr...
In February of 2014, a grand jury returned an indictment charging William Kirkaldie with domestic ab...
Domestic violence is a severe problem for tribes across the nation, as their female members are vict...
This article critiques a proposal to include tribal court criminal convictions and sentences in the ...
“If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you.” Since Miranda v. Arizona, that po...
The epidemic of domestic violence committed against Native American women and the jurisdictional maz...
Concerns about the reliability of criminal justice systems in foreign countries have resulted in une...
If tribal courts provided competent counsel to indigent Indian defendants, Creel said, Then I would...
June 13 of this year marked a milestone in constitutional law. Fifty years earlier, in 1966, the Sup...
On July 6, 2011, in United States v. Cavanaugh, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit hel...
Native American Indians charged in tribal court criminal proceedings are not entitled to court appoi...
Domestic violence has riddled the indigenous communities of the United States for decades. Within th...
State and federal courts increasingly are being confronted with prosecutors moving the court to cons...
Indian tribes in the United States are separate sovereigns with inherent self-governing authority. A...
Part I of this article is a history and analysis of the federal constitutional right to effective as...
A defendant in state and federal courts is entitled to a constitutional protection against self-incr...
In February of 2014, a grand jury returned an indictment charging William Kirkaldie with domestic ab...
Domestic violence is a severe problem for tribes across the nation, as their female members are vict...
This article critiques a proposal to include tribal court criminal convictions and sentences in the ...