This article examines the war on financial crimes that began after the collapse of Enron in 2001. Although many believed that the reforms implemented following this scandal led to greater prosecutorial focus on financial crimes and longer prison sentences, an analysis of data from 1995 through 2006 reveals that little has actually changed. The statistics demonstrate that the government\u27s focus on financial crimes has not increased and prison sentences for fraud have remained stagnant. How could this be the case? It is this author\u27s hypothesis that although prosecutors could have chosen to use new statutes and amendments to the United States Sentencing Guidelines passed in the wake of Enron to increase prosecutions and sentences, they ...
article published in law reviewConsider what plea bargains would be like if legal rules were taken m...
Plea bargaining accounts for over ninety percent of criminal convictions and it dominates the Americ...
This article documents the diffusion of plea bargaining and other mechanisms to reach criminal convi...
This article examines the war on financial crimes that began after the collapse of Enron in 2001. Al...
This article considers how the composition and gravamen of a charged crime can affect the parties’ w...
Since September 11, 2001, several hundred individuals have been convicted of terrorism related charg...
This article examines the 2011 Supreme Court decision in United States v. Freeman. At issue was whet...
White-collar offenders understandably attract a significant amount of resentment and animosity. They...
America’s plea-bargaining system is famously informal. While there is a smattering of state and fede...
This article argues that in addition to the swing toward increased judicial discretion and overall l...
In recent years, U.S. federal prosecutors have shifted their stance from prosecuting and convicting ...
This symposium article responds to the question, what\u27s left of the law in the wake of ADR? The a...
Nobody likes plea bargaining. Scholars worldwide have excoriated the practice, calling it coercive a...
In the 2012 companion cases of Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, the United States Supreme Cour...
This report on plea bargaining was written for the Academy for Justice, a collaborative research p...
article published in law reviewConsider what plea bargains would be like if legal rules were taken m...
Plea bargaining accounts for over ninety percent of criminal convictions and it dominates the Americ...
This article documents the diffusion of plea bargaining and other mechanisms to reach criminal convi...
This article examines the war on financial crimes that began after the collapse of Enron in 2001. Al...
This article considers how the composition and gravamen of a charged crime can affect the parties’ w...
Since September 11, 2001, several hundred individuals have been convicted of terrorism related charg...
This article examines the 2011 Supreme Court decision in United States v. Freeman. At issue was whet...
White-collar offenders understandably attract a significant amount of resentment and animosity. They...
America’s plea-bargaining system is famously informal. While there is a smattering of state and fede...
This article argues that in addition to the swing toward increased judicial discretion and overall l...
In recent years, U.S. federal prosecutors have shifted their stance from prosecuting and convicting ...
This symposium article responds to the question, what\u27s left of the law in the wake of ADR? The a...
Nobody likes plea bargaining. Scholars worldwide have excoriated the practice, calling it coercive a...
In the 2012 companion cases of Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, the United States Supreme Cour...
This report on plea bargaining was written for the Academy for Justice, a collaborative research p...
article published in law reviewConsider what plea bargains would be like if legal rules were taken m...
Plea bargaining accounts for over ninety percent of criminal convictions and it dominates the Americ...
This article documents the diffusion of plea bargaining and other mechanisms to reach criminal convi...