“I was just following orders,” and, “The government made me do it,” are phrases from two different criminal law defenses: obedience to orders and entrapment. A military defense, obedience to orders allows a soldier to escape liability by arguing that she was obeying orders when she committed the supposed crime. The civilian defense of entrapment allows a defendant to escape liability by arguing that the police pressured her to commit the crime. Despite the fact that both defenses require a level of government involvement, courts and scholars alike have treated these defenses differently. This Article finally addresses this inconsistency and reorients obedience to orders to more closely resemble entrapment.Currently, obedience to orders carr...
The Supreme Court of the United States has held that the defense of entrapment is available only if ...
In Jacobson v. United States, the Supreme Court narrowed the types of evidence that the prosecution ...
Defendants who are being tried for accepting a temptation issued by the government sometimes employ ...
“I was just following orders,” and, “The government made me do it,” are phrases from two different c...
In the United States, a criminal defendant can show himself to be not guilty of the crime of which h...
The issue of entrapment arises initially as a defense when a person is accused of committing a crimi...
This Comment discusses the theory of sentence entrapment and the application of the defense. Part II...
The task of this Article is to assess the competing approaches that circuit courts have taken in def...
The defense of entrapment is unique since the defendant necessarily concedes the commission of a cri...
Through the entrapment defense, the law acknowledges that criminal behavior is not always the result...
Many the states currently use a version of the entrapment defense known as the “objective test,” whi...
The federal law of procedure in entrapment cases is in profound disarray. Despite four attempts over...
Since 1932, the defense of entrapment has been firmly established in the federal courts; however, th...
In the United States, all military personnel swear to obey “the orders of the President of the Unite...
For the past eighty years, the entrapment doctrine has provided a legal defense for defendants facin...
The Supreme Court of the United States has held that the defense of entrapment is available only if ...
In Jacobson v. United States, the Supreme Court narrowed the types of evidence that the prosecution ...
Defendants who are being tried for accepting a temptation issued by the government sometimes employ ...
“I was just following orders,” and, “The government made me do it,” are phrases from two different c...
In the United States, a criminal defendant can show himself to be not guilty of the crime of which h...
The issue of entrapment arises initially as a defense when a person is accused of committing a crimi...
This Comment discusses the theory of sentence entrapment and the application of the defense. Part II...
The task of this Article is to assess the competing approaches that circuit courts have taken in def...
The defense of entrapment is unique since the defendant necessarily concedes the commission of a cri...
Through the entrapment defense, the law acknowledges that criminal behavior is not always the result...
Many the states currently use a version of the entrapment defense known as the “objective test,” whi...
The federal law of procedure in entrapment cases is in profound disarray. Despite four attempts over...
Since 1932, the defense of entrapment has been firmly established in the federal courts; however, th...
In the United States, all military personnel swear to obey “the orders of the President of the Unite...
For the past eighty years, the entrapment doctrine has provided a legal defense for defendants facin...
The Supreme Court of the United States has held that the defense of entrapment is available only if ...
In Jacobson v. United States, the Supreme Court narrowed the types of evidence that the prosecution ...
Defendants who are being tried for accepting a temptation issued by the government sometimes employ ...