Sex offender civil commitment (SOCC) is a massive deprivation of liberty as severe as penal incarceration. Because it eschews most of the great safeguards constraining the criminal power, SOCC demands careful constitutional scrutiny. Although the Supreme Court has clearly applied heightened scrutiny in judging civil commitment schemes, it has never actually specified where on the scrutiny spectrum its analysis falls. This article argues that standard three-tier scrutiny analysis is not the most coherent way to understand the Supreme Court’s civil commitment jurisprudence. Rather than a harm-balancing judgment typical of three-tier scrutiny, the Court’s civil commitment cases are best understood as forbidden purpose cases, a construct that...
Sex offender commitment statutes are a controversial and recurring response to the threat of sexual ...
This article examines New York\u27s newly enacted sex offender civil commitment law entitled Sex Off...
Recent litigation and scholarship have begun to focus on the substantive limits of the state\u27s po...
Sex offender civil commitment (SOCC) is a massive deprivation of liberty as severe as penal incarcer...
Over the past fifty years the Supreme Court has been repeatedly asked to address the constitutionali...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Kansas v. Hendricks suggests that few constitutional limitations ...
This article addresses a paradigmatic risk-based collateral sanction, the so-called civil confinemen...
In Illinois, a person deemed a Sexually Violent Person (“SVP”) in a civil trial can be detained inde...
This Article examines the constitutional concerns raised by, and compares the costs and benefits ass...
Twenty states, the District of Columbia, and the federal government have enacted Sexually Violent Pr...
In 2006, the State of Nebraska adopted legislation that authorizes the civil commitment of convicted...
Today, an estimated 5400 people are civilly committed under state and federal sex offender programs....
Sex offender commitment laws present courts with a difficult choice: either allow creative efforts t...
Currently over five thousand individuals are indefinitely confined in the United States with little ...
In 1997, the Supreme Court held that the sexually violent predator (SVP) act in Kansas did not viola...
Sex offender commitment statutes are a controversial and recurring response to the threat of sexual ...
This article examines New York\u27s newly enacted sex offender civil commitment law entitled Sex Off...
Recent litigation and scholarship have begun to focus on the substantive limits of the state\u27s po...
Sex offender civil commitment (SOCC) is a massive deprivation of liberty as severe as penal incarcer...
Over the past fifty years the Supreme Court has been repeatedly asked to address the constitutionali...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Kansas v. Hendricks suggests that few constitutional limitations ...
This article addresses a paradigmatic risk-based collateral sanction, the so-called civil confinemen...
In Illinois, a person deemed a Sexually Violent Person (“SVP”) in a civil trial can be detained inde...
This Article examines the constitutional concerns raised by, and compares the costs and benefits ass...
Twenty states, the District of Columbia, and the federal government have enacted Sexually Violent Pr...
In 2006, the State of Nebraska adopted legislation that authorizes the civil commitment of convicted...
Today, an estimated 5400 people are civilly committed under state and federal sex offender programs....
Sex offender commitment laws present courts with a difficult choice: either allow creative efforts t...
Currently over five thousand individuals are indefinitely confined in the United States with little ...
In 1997, the Supreme Court held that the sexually violent predator (SVP) act in Kansas did not viola...
Sex offender commitment statutes are a controversial and recurring response to the threat of sexual ...
This article examines New York\u27s newly enacted sex offender civil commitment law entitled Sex Off...
Recent litigation and scholarship have begun to focus on the substantive limits of the state\u27s po...