The power and prestige of the American prosecutor have changed dramatically over the past twenty years. Three generalizations appropriately describe this change. First, prosecutors wield vastly more power than ever before. Second, prosecutors are more insulated from judicial control over their conduct. Third, prosecutors are increasingly immune to ethical restraints. Only the last point may provoke some controversy; the first two are easily documented, and generally accepted by the courts and commentators. Part I of this article examines in greater detail this vast accretion of prosecutorial power, and explains how this transformation has resulted in a radical skewing of the balance of advantage in the criminal justice system in favor of th...
A discussion of restorative justice and its relation to prosecutorial discretion. The article gives...
In a law review article written seventeen years ago, Professor Abbe Smith asked the question, “Can Y...
There is perhaps no other actor within our legal system that shares more power and control over the ...
The power and prestige of the American prosecutor have changed dramatically over the past twenty yea...
Times have changed. Today, prosecutors are on top of the world. Their powers are enormous, and const...
Most recognize that federal and state laws imposing high sentences and reducing judicial sentencing ...
The key to the growing prominence of prosecutors, both in the United States and elsewhere, lies in t...
One of the predominant themes in the criminal justice literature is that prosecutors dominate the ju...
Prosecutors are the most powerful officials in the American criminal justice system. The decisions t...
For decades, legal commentators sounded the alarm about the tremendous power wielded by prosecutors....
As every lawyer knows, the prosecutor is the most powerful figure in the American criminal justice s...
The prosecutor acts as a minister of justice with sweeping discretion to charge an individual with a...
For decades, state and local prosecutors won election by promising to be tough on crime. Today, a ne...
This Article describes the rhetorical and regulatory changes that characterize the new prosecutorial...
As the most powerful actors in our criminal legal system, prosecutors have been and remain one of th...
A discussion of restorative justice and its relation to prosecutorial discretion. The article gives...
In a law review article written seventeen years ago, Professor Abbe Smith asked the question, “Can Y...
There is perhaps no other actor within our legal system that shares more power and control over the ...
The power and prestige of the American prosecutor have changed dramatically over the past twenty yea...
Times have changed. Today, prosecutors are on top of the world. Their powers are enormous, and const...
Most recognize that federal and state laws imposing high sentences and reducing judicial sentencing ...
The key to the growing prominence of prosecutors, both in the United States and elsewhere, lies in t...
One of the predominant themes in the criminal justice literature is that prosecutors dominate the ju...
Prosecutors are the most powerful officials in the American criminal justice system. The decisions t...
For decades, legal commentators sounded the alarm about the tremendous power wielded by prosecutors....
As every lawyer knows, the prosecutor is the most powerful figure in the American criminal justice s...
The prosecutor acts as a minister of justice with sweeping discretion to charge an individual with a...
For decades, state and local prosecutors won election by promising to be tough on crime. Today, a ne...
This Article describes the rhetorical and regulatory changes that characterize the new prosecutorial...
As the most powerful actors in our criminal legal system, prosecutors have been and remain one of th...
A discussion of restorative justice and its relation to prosecutorial discretion. The article gives...
In a law review article written seventeen years ago, Professor Abbe Smith asked the question, “Can Y...
There is perhaps no other actor within our legal system that shares more power and control over the ...