More than half of federal criminal defendants are charged with multiple offenses in a single indictment. These defendants are more likely to be convicted on at least one charge than defendants who receive separate trials for each charge. Joinder has been both lauded for increasing the efficiency of the federal criminal justice system and criticized for unfairly prejudicing criminal defendants. Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure 8(a) and 14 govern the joinder of offenses in the federal system. Rule 8(a) permits offenses of the “same or similar character” to be joined against a single defendant while Rule 14 allows district courts to sever the offenses if joinder “appears to prejudice a defendant.” The circuit courts have taken divergent vie...
The subject of joinder of parties is peculiarly interesting in that it shows the growing tendency to...
Is a criminal defendant who discharges a weapon five times in rapid succession guilty of one crime o...
The arm-of-the-state doctrine, which entitles certain governmental entities to the states’ sovereign...
More than half of federal criminal defendants are charged with multiple offenses in a single indictm...
Constitutional scholars have long debated the relative merits of a conduct-based compulsory joinder ...
In all state and federal jurisdictions in the United States, joinder allows prosecutors to join mult...
The Sixth Amendment states that “in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to ...
Dave is in trouble. It was bad enough to be arrested for bank robbery; now he has learned that the p...
The pleading rules concerning joinder and splitting of causes of action are complements of each othe...
The Framers placed a high premium on jury independence and viewed the jury\u27s ability to dispense ...
Federal appellate courts are currently split on the definition of “controlled substance” in the care...
This Article explores, and ultimately embraces, a new exception to the complete diversity rule in re...
The jury is essential to our structure of government, available to criminal defendants as the final ...
This Comment seeks to resolve an ongoing dispute among courts regarding the correct interpretation o...
Ever since In re Winship in 1970, it is well settled that the Due Process Clause requires a jury to ...
The subject of joinder of parties is peculiarly interesting in that it shows the growing tendency to...
Is a criminal defendant who discharges a weapon five times in rapid succession guilty of one crime o...
The arm-of-the-state doctrine, which entitles certain governmental entities to the states’ sovereign...
More than half of federal criminal defendants are charged with multiple offenses in a single indictm...
Constitutional scholars have long debated the relative merits of a conduct-based compulsory joinder ...
In all state and federal jurisdictions in the United States, joinder allows prosecutors to join mult...
The Sixth Amendment states that “in all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to ...
Dave is in trouble. It was bad enough to be arrested for bank robbery; now he has learned that the p...
The pleading rules concerning joinder and splitting of causes of action are complements of each othe...
The Framers placed a high premium on jury independence and viewed the jury\u27s ability to dispense ...
Federal appellate courts are currently split on the definition of “controlled substance” in the care...
This Article explores, and ultimately embraces, a new exception to the complete diversity rule in re...
The jury is essential to our structure of government, available to criminal defendants as the final ...
This Comment seeks to resolve an ongoing dispute among courts regarding the correct interpretation o...
Ever since In re Winship in 1970, it is well settled that the Due Process Clause requires a jury to ...
The subject of joinder of parties is peculiarly interesting in that it shows the growing tendency to...
Is a criminal defendant who discharges a weapon five times in rapid succession guilty of one crime o...
The arm-of-the-state doctrine, which entitles certain governmental entities to the states’ sovereign...