Each year, U.S. courts send thousands of incompetent defendants to hospitals for treatment, where psychiatrists frequently administer psychotropic medication that can alleviate symptoms and allow the defendants to proceed with criminal adjudication. Although defendants and their attorneys usually do not object to such treatment, treatment refusals in two recent, nationally prominent cases-those of Russell Eugene Weston, Jr., the accused Capitol shooter, and Charles T. Sell, a dentist charged with filing false insurance claims-have focused legal and media attention on whether and under what conditions competence restoration can be forced on an unwilling defendant. In its June 2003 decision in Sell v. United States, the Supreme Court issued g...
This article addresses whether the state has the right to medicate involuntarily a defendant who is ...
This Article considers whether lawyers act as zealous advocates when they represent mentally disorde...
The government should not place a defendant to whom it is administering involuntary medications in f...
Each year, U.S. courts send thousands of incompetent defendants to hospitals for treatment, where ps...
The right to refuse treatment is firmly recognized in U.S. law. Competent persons have the legal rig...
The focus of this article is whether it is ethical for physicians to participate in the evaluation o...
The Supreme Court’s 2003 decision in Sell v. United States declared that situations in which the sta...
The Supreme Court\u27s 2003 decision in Sell v. United States declared that situations in which the ...
This Article concerns the due process requirements in determining a mental patient’s competency to m...
The purpose of this Note is to analyze what right, if any exists for a mentally ill criminal defenda...
This paper explores the legal problems that arise when the government undertakes to render a crimina...
Criminal defendants who are incompetent to stand trial have a significant liberty interest in refusi...
The purpose of this paper is to merge two largely separate bodies of writing on the subject of psych...
This Article contends that when the government seeks to administer involuntary antipsychotic medicat...
This article argues that despite the benefits of ridding the criminal justice system of some uncerta...
This article addresses whether the state has the right to medicate involuntarily a defendant who is ...
This Article considers whether lawyers act as zealous advocates when they represent mentally disorde...
The government should not place a defendant to whom it is administering involuntary medications in f...
Each year, U.S. courts send thousands of incompetent defendants to hospitals for treatment, where ps...
The right to refuse treatment is firmly recognized in U.S. law. Competent persons have the legal rig...
The focus of this article is whether it is ethical for physicians to participate in the evaluation o...
The Supreme Court’s 2003 decision in Sell v. United States declared that situations in which the sta...
The Supreme Court\u27s 2003 decision in Sell v. United States declared that situations in which the ...
This Article concerns the due process requirements in determining a mental patient’s competency to m...
The purpose of this Note is to analyze what right, if any exists for a mentally ill criminal defenda...
This paper explores the legal problems that arise when the government undertakes to render a crimina...
Criminal defendants who are incompetent to stand trial have a significant liberty interest in refusi...
The purpose of this paper is to merge two largely separate bodies of writing on the subject of psych...
This Article contends that when the government seeks to administer involuntary antipsychotic medicat...
This article argues that despite the benefits of ridding the criminal justice system of some uncerta...
This article addresses whether the state has the right to medicate involuntarily a defendant who is ...
This Article considers whether lawyers act as zealous advocates when they represent mentally disorde...
The government should not place a defendant to whom it is administering involuntary medications in f...