In criminal cases at common law, juries are permitted to convict on wholly circumstantial evidence even in the face of a reasonable case for acquittal. This generates the highly counterintuitive—if not absurd—consequence that there being reason to think that the accused didn’t do it is not reason to doubt that he did. This is the no-reason-to-doubt problem. It has a technical solution provided that the evidence on which it is reasonable to think that the accused didn’t do it is a different subset of the total evidence from that on which there is no reason to doubt that he did do it. It lies in the adversarial nature of criminal proceedings in the common law tradition that the subsets of the total evidence on which counsel base their opposin...
Lawyers pride themselves on being men of reason. After all, they postulate, it is the reasonable ma...
This article contributes in three ways to the prior literature on the reasonable doubt standard. Fir...
This article contributes in three ways to the prior literature on the reasonable doubt standard. Fir...
Abstract: In criminal cases at common law, juries are permitted to convict on wholly circumstantial ...
Whatever is thought to be the purposes of criminal punishment, one fundamental principle seems to ha...
There seems to be apparent judicial conflict as to the quantum of evidence required when the case fo...
The Criminal Abduction Paradox In criminal trials at common law there is an apparent clash of legal ...
abstract: The purpose of this paper is to make the beyond a reasonable doubt standard in criminal tr...
Explanationist accounts of rational legal proof view trials as a competition between explanations. S...
It is a "bedrock" principle of our criminal jurisprudence, that the state has the burden of proving ...
Unlike in the US and Commonwealth jury systems, where judges give defined or undefined `beyond reaso...
The standard of criminal proof beyond a reasonable doubt is believed almost everywhere to be a bulwa...
Whether the guilt of an accused has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt is always a difficult issu...
The ‘reasonable doubt standard’ is the controlling standard of proof for criminal fact finding in se...
2014-04-26The doctrine of reasonable doubt is deeply entrenched within American culture, but the con...
Lawyers pride themselves on being men of reason. After all, they postulate, it is the reasonable ma...
This article contributes in three ways to the prior literature on the reasonable doubt standard. Fir...
This article contributes in three ways to the prior literature on the reasonable doubt standard. Fir...
Abstract: In criminal cases at common law, juries are permitted to convict on wholly circumstantial ...
Whatever is thought to be the purposes of criminal punishment, one fundamental principle seems to ha...
There seems to be apparent judicial conflict as to the quantum of evidence required when the case fo...
The Criminal Abduction Paradox In criminal trials at common law there is an apparent clash of legal ...
abstract: The purpose of this paper is to make the beyond a reasonable doubt standard in criminal tr...
Explanationist accounts of rational legal proof view trials as a competition between explanations. S...
It is a "bedrock" principle of our criminal jurisprudence, that the state has the burden of proving ...
Unlike in the US and Commonwealth jury systems, where judges give defined or undefined `beyond reaso...
The standard of criminal proof beyond a reasonable doubt is believed almost everywhere to be a bulwa...
Whether the guilt of an accused has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt is always a difficult issu...
The ‘reasonable doubt standard’ is the controlling standard of proof for criminal fact finding in se...
2014-04-26The doctrine of reasonable doubt is deeply entrenched within American culture, but the con...
Lawyers pride themselves on being men of reason. After all, they postulate, it is the reasonable ma...
This article contributes in three ways to the prior literature on the reasonable doubt standard. Fir...
This article contributes in three ways to the prior literature on the reasonable doubt standard. Fir...