Cooperation agreements and plea agreements are separate and independent promises by criminal defendants to: (1) assist the Government in the prosecution of another person and (2) plead guilty. A defendant’s breach of one should not affect the Government’s obligation to perform under the other. All too often, however, these agreements are inappropriately intertwined so that a minor breach of the plea agreement relieves the Government of its obligation to move for a downward sentencing departure in recognition of the defendant’s substantial assistance. This intertwining undermines sentencing policy as set forth in the federal sentencing statute. Thus, a district court should continue to consider a defendant’s substantial assistance when impo...
In Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that plea bargaining, although ...
This article examines the 2011 Supreme Court decision in United States v. Freeman. At issue was whet...
The myth of American exceptionalism in the matter of plea-bargaining is certainly by now quite untru...
Cooperation agreements and plea agreements are separate and independent promises by criminal defenda...
In criminal prosecutions, both state and federal, closely negotiated agreements for immunity and len...
Increasingly, defendants enter into proposed plea agreements that require pre-plea cooperation with ...
The vast majority of criminal prosecutions are concluded not by trial but by a guilty plea,\u27 whic...
A major concern with plea bargains is that innocent defendants will be induced to plead guilty. This...
The overwhelming majority of convictions in the United States are obtained through guilty pleas. Man...
This paper analyzes plea bargaining and plea negotiation in the American judicial system. Plea barga...
A common misconception of the American criminal justice system is the belief that an accused may on...
In the federal criminal justice system, plea bargaining remains the predominant method for disposing...
Courts in common law countries reject plea-agreements only when the agreed upon sentence is seen as ...
Plea bargaining in the United States is in critical respects unregulated, and a key reason is the ma...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
In Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that plea bargaining, although ...
This article examines the 2011 Supreme Court decision in United States v. Freeman. At issue was whet...
The myth of American exceptionalism in the matter of plea-bargaining is certainly by now quite untru...
Cooperation agreements and plea agreements are separate and independent promises by criminal defenda...
In criminal prosecutions, both state and federal, closely negotiated agreements for immunity and len...
Increasingly, defendants enter into proposed plea agreements that require pre-plea cooperation with ...
The vast majority of criminal prosecutions are concluded not by trial but by a guilty plea,\u27 whic...
A major concern with plea bargains is that innocent defendants will be induced to plead guilty. This...
The overwhelming majority of convictions in the United States are obtained through guilty pleas. Man...
This paper analyzes plea bargaining and plea negotiation in the American judicial system. Plea barga...
A common misconception of the American criminal justice system is the belief that an accused may on...
In the federal criminal justice system, plea bargaining remains the predominant method for disposing...
Courts in common law countries reject plea-agreements only when the agreed upon sentence is seen as ...
Plea bargaining in the United States is in critical respects unregulated, and a key reason is the ma...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
In Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that plea bargaining, although ...
This article examines the 2011 Supreme Court decision in United States v. Freeman. At issue was whet...
The myth of American exceptionalism in the matter of plea-bargaining is certainly by now quite untru...