A discount in sentencing quantum is routinely provided to defendants who plead guilty to offences. This article examines the reasons for such a discount, and argues that there is little appropriate justification; and further that it creates, in effect, a penalty for defendants who exercise their right to trial. It is further argued that the existence of such a discount can provide an inappropriate incentive to enter a guilty plea for defendants who may otherwise have had a valid reason for exercising their right to trial
Most criminal prosecutions are settled without a trial. The parties to these settlements trade vario...
Nearly all felony convictions—about 95 percent—follow guilty pleas, suggesting that plea offers are ...
The research reported in this Essay examines process discounts-differences in sentences imposed for ...
The guilty plea sentencing discount is arguably a triumph of expediency over principle. Strong utili...
This chapter scrutinises structural and theoretical issues about what is officially known as a sente...
Most offenders plead guilty without a trial. Their guilty plea typically earns a reduced punishment...
Sentence discounts are now routinely used by Australian courts to encourage guilty pleas. In this ar...
In this Article, the author argues that differential sentencing of criminal defendants who plead gui...
A major concern with plea bargains is that innocent defendants will be induced to plead guilty. This...
This paper draws attention to the interests of the victim in the criminal justice system in relation...
Consistency, and avoiding undue disparity, is a central tenet of the sentencing system. Whilst consi...
This article defends plea bargaining and responds to a trend in the academic literature to evaluate ...
Approximately 90 percent of all American criminal cases are disposed of by means of guilty pleas, an...
The influence of the plea bargaining system on innocent defendants is fiercely debated. Many scholar...
In the daily work of the criminal justice process, the relationship between plea decision-making and...
Most criminal prosecutions are settled without a trial. The parties to these settlements trade vario...
Nearly all felony convictions—about 95 percent—follow guilty pleas, suggesting that plea offers are ...
The research reported in this Essay examines process discounts-differences in sentences imposed for ...
The guilty plea sentencing discount is arguably a triumph of expediency over principle. Strong utili...
This chapter scrutinises structural and theoretical issues about what is officially known as a sente...
Most offenders plead guilty without a trial. Their guilty plea typically earns a reduced punishment...
Sentence discounts are now routinely used by Australian courts to encourage guilty pleas. In this ar...
In this Article, the author argues that differential sentencing of criminal defendants who plead gui...
A major concern with plea bargains is that innocent defendants will be induced to plead guilty. This...
This paper draws attention to the interests of the victim in the criminal justice system in relation...
Consistency, and avoiding undue disparity, is a central tenet of the sentencing system. Whilst consi...
This article defends plea bargaining and responds to a trend in the academic literature to evaluate ...
Approximately 90 percent of all American criminal cases are disposed of by means of guilty pleas, an...
The influence of the plea bargaining system on innocent defendants is fiercely debated. Many scholar...
In the daily work of the criminal justice process, the relationship between plea decision-making and...
Most criminal prosecutions are settled without a trial. The parties to these settlements trade vario...
Nearly all felony convictions—about 95 percent—follow guilty pleas, suggesting that plea offers are ...
The research reported in this Essay examines process discounts-differences in sentences imposed for ...