As presently construed, the Constitution does not prohibit the death penalty. The states and the federal government may punish the commission of certain crimes with death, so long as the extreme penalty is not imposed on a mandatory basis and so long as the procedures used in imposing a death sentence meet constitutional scrutiny. A demonstration that the prosecutor used the peremptory challenge in the manner described in a single case probably would be insufficient to support a constitutional challenge in the federal courts and in the vast majority of state courts. In these courts a prosecutor\u27s use of the peremptory in a single case is generally beyond review. To raise a constitutional challenge, a defendant may have to show a systemat...
In this Article, I review the efficacy of peremptory challenges and conclude that both empirical and...
The death penalty applies to two offenses under Florida law; first degree murder\u27 and capital dru...
Prosecutorial misconduct in the form of improper closing argument has been identified as a leading c...
As presently construed, the Constitution does not prohibit the death penalty. The states and the fed...
As national attention focuses on the extensive imposition of the death penalty in Florida, the autho...
After Furman v. Georgia held that state statutes that allow for the imposition of the death penalty ...
As the Supreme Court has said, time and again, death is different: It is different in kind from any...
Capital murder trials present a unique challenge to defense counsel. Many capital defendants are dem...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Batson v. Kentucky, and the extension of Batson to parties other ...
Death penalty litigation that reaches the Supreme Court now causes at least as much consternation as...
The Supreme Court has said that the Constitution permits trial judges to exclude from the pool of po...
Prosecutorial misconduct in closing argument during the penalty phase of capital trials can be defin...
The prosecutor wields tremendous power within the American criminal justice system. When that power ...
In Strickland v. Washington, the United States Supreme Court issued a seminal holding that single-ha...
The study of capital juries remains a subject of critical interest for the public and for legislativ...
In this Article, I review the efficacy of peremptory challenges and conclude that both empirical and...
The death penalty applies to two offenses under Florida law; first degree murder\u27 and capital dru...
Prosecutorial misconduct in the form of improper closing argument has been identified as a leading c...
As presently construed, the Constitution does not prohibit the death penalty. The states and the fed...
As national attention focuses on the extensive imposition of the death penalty in Florida, the autho...
After Furman v. Georgia held that state statutes that allow for the imposition of the death penalty ...
As the Supreme Court has said, time and again, death is different: It is different in kind from any...
Capital murder trials present a unique challenge to defense counsel. Many capital defendants are dem...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Batson v. Kentucky, and the extension of Batson to parties other ...
Death penalty litigation that reaches the Supreme Court now causes at least as much consternation as...
The Supreme Court has said that the Constitution permits trial judges to exclude from the pool of po...
Prosecutorial misconduct in closing argument during the penalty phase of capital trials can be defin...
The prosecutor wields tremendous power within the American criminal justice system. When that power ...
In Strickland v. Washington, the United States Supreme Court issued a seminal holding that single-ha...
The study of capital juries remains a subject of critical interest for the public and for legislativ...
In this Article, I review the efficacy of peremptory challenges and conclude that both empirical and...
The death penalty applies to two offenses under Florida law; first degree murder\u27 and capital dru...
Prosecutorial misconduct in the form of improper closing argument has been identified as a leading c...