Dave is in trouble. It was bad enough to be arrested for bank robbery; now he has learned that the prosecutor plans to join the current charge with three other, unrelated bank robberies and present all four counts in a single trial. To his priest and to his lawyer, Dave admits that he committed the first and the second robberies, but he did not commit the third or fourth. Dave is smart enough to realize, however, that once the jury starts hearing evidence of some of the crimes-all of which will sound quite similar-his ability to cast doubt on the remaining charges will be dimmed. And Dave\u27s lawyer is smart enough to know that once the charges are joined, the chances of splitting them apart are relatively small. It is widely assumed that ...
Every year hundreds of thousands of convicted criminal defendants are sentenced for their crimes, of...
Petitioner asks this Court to interpret Fed. R. Evid. 606(b) as permitting statements made by jurors...
No abstract availableThe ne bis in idem prohibits to punish or prosecute a person for an offence for...
The U.S. Supreme Court revolutionized the law on pleading by its suggestive Bell Atlantic Corp. v....
Unlike virtually any other business, expert witnesses are not typically held accountable in either t...
More than sixty years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Remmer v. United States, thereby defining ...
This Article develops normative and doctrinal innovations to cope with a pivotal yet undertheorized ...
(Excerpt) Some forty years ago, in Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore, the United States Supreme Court he...
I. Introduction II. Appellate Justice and the Precipitation of United States Supreme Court Activity ...
This article begins in part I, Introduction, with two observations. First, the function of procedur...
For more than a century, the Supreme Court has interpreted the Bill of Rights as prohibiting the p...
Cardozo\u27s opinion in Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad Co.\u27 hinges on a stark assertion about r...
This Article advocates two changes to the law. First, parties should be allowed (but not required) t...
Grand jury proceedings are shrouded in secrecy. No judge presides over them, no reporter annotates t...
As courts confront, and commentators begin to write about, the many jurisdictional questions that em...
Every year hundreds of thousands of convicted criminal defendants are sentenced for their crimes, of...
Petitioner asks this Court to interpret Fed. R. Evid. 606(b) as permitting statements made by jurors...
No abstract availableThe ne bis in idem prohibits to punish or prosecute a person for an offence for...
The U.S. Supreme Court revolutionized the law on pleading by its suggestive Bell Atlantic Corp. v....
Unlike virtually any other business, expert witnesses are not typically held accountable in either t...
More than sixty years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court decided Remmer v. United States, thereby defining ...
This Article develops normative and doctrinal innovations to cope with a pivotal yet undertheorized ...
(Excerpt) Some forty years ago, in Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore, the United States Supreme Court he...
I. Introduction II. Appellate Justice and the Precipitation of United States Supreme Court Activity ...
This article begins in part I, Introduction, with two observations. First, the function of procedur...
For more than a century, the Supreme Court has interpreted the Bill of Rights as prohibiting the p...
Cardozo\u27s opinion in Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad Co.\u27 hinges on a stark assertion about r...
This Article advocates two changes to the law. First, parties should be allowed (but not required) t...
Grand jury proceedings are shrouded in secrecy. No judge presides over them, no reporter annotates t...
As courts confront, and commentators begin to write about, the many jurisdictional questions that em...
Every year hundreds of thousands of convicted criminal defendants are sentenced for their crimes, of...
Petitioner asks this Court to interpret Fed. R. Evid. 606(b) as permitting statements made by jurors...
No abstract availableThe ne bis in idem prohibits to punish or prosecute a person for an offence for...