The United States Supreme Court, in Darden v. Wainwright, stated that where the error is forensic in nature, appellate courts should reverse a conviction when the prosecutor\u27s misconduct so infected the trial with unfairness as to make the resulting conviction a denial of due process. Therefore, except in the most egregious cases, appellate courts are placed in the uncomfortable position of condemning the prosecutor\u27s behavior while affirming the conviction, thus fostering what an appellate judge once called a deplorably cynical attitude towards the judiciary. This article will focus on one aspect of prosecutorial misconduct which has been chronicled with alarming regularity in recent state court decisions: improper prosecutorial r...
Prosecutorial misconduct in the form of improper closing argument has been identified as a leading c...
Prosecutorial misconduct in closing argument is increasing in frequency and appears to be pernicious...
Although courts have traditionally relied primarily on prosecutors’ individual self-restraint and in...
The United States Supreme Court, in Darden v. Wainwright, stated that where the error is forensic in...
This article is the first of two articles that discuss the concern of prosecutorial misconduct. This...
Trial prosecutors’ visible misbehavior, such as improper questioning of witnesses and improper jury ...
Professor Gershman critically examines a series of recent Supreme Court decisions dealing with prose...
The author, perhaps the nation\u27s top authority on prosecutorial misconduct, raises and analyzes t...
For nearly eighty years, courts have offered stirring rhetoric about how prosecutors must not strike...
This Article explores the unfortunately large number of instances in which appellate courts reverse ...
An attorney is licensed and is sworn as an officer of the court. Common law proclaims him to be a m...
This article describes the myriad ways in which misconduct by jurors can contaminate a trial and ver...
While most prosecutors adhere to the maxim that their primary task is to obtain just results, there ...
This article explores the legal profession\u27s failure to hold prosecutors accountable for miscondu...
This Article argues that a prosecutor\u27s intent is always relevant to the courts\u27 analysis of m...
Prosecutorial misconduct in the form of improper closing argument has been identified as a leading c...
Prosecutorial misconduct in closing argument is increasing in frequency and appears to be pernicious...
Although courts have traditionally relied primarily on prosecutors’ individual self-restraint and in...
The United States Supreme Court, in Darden v. Wainwright, stated that where the error is forensic in...
This article is the first of two articles that discuss the concern of prosecutorial misconduct. This...
Trial prosecutors’ visible misbehavior, such as improper questioning of witnesses and improper jury ...
Professor Gershman critically examines a series of recent Supreme Court decisions dealing with prose...
The author, perhaps the nation\u27s top authority on prosecutorial misconduct, raises and analyzes t...
For nearly eighty years, courts have offered stirring rhetoric about how prosecutors must not strike...
This Article explores the unfortunately large number of instances in which appellate courts reverse ...
An attorney is licensed and is sworn as an officer of the court. Common law proclaims him to be a m...
This article describes the myriad ways in which misconduct by jurors can contaminate a trial and ver...
While most prosecutors adhere to the maxim that their primary task is to obtain just results, there ...
This article explores the legal profession\u27s failure to hold prosecutors accountable for miscondu...
This Article argues that a prosecutor\u27s intent is always relevant to the courts\u27 analysis of m...
Prosecutorial misconduct in the form of improper closing argument has been identified as a leading c...
Prosecutorial misconduct in closing argument is increasing in frequency and appears to be pernicious...
Although courts have traditionally relied primarily on prosecutors’ individual self-restraint and in...