Excerpts taken from and based on Professor Kamisar\u27s introduction to his book Police Interrogation and Confessions: Essays in Law and Policy (University of Michigan Press, 1980).These essays, written over two decades, constitute an historical overview of the Supreme Court\u27s efforts to deal with the police interrogation-confessions problem from preMirando days to the present time and provide provocative analyses of the issues that have confronted the Court along the way. Before deciding to publish a collection of Kamisar\u27s essays on confessions, the University of Michigan Press asked for evaluations from two of the current leading writers on the subject, Professor Joseph D. Grano of Wayne State University Law School and Professor We...
In 1965, Yale Kamisar authored “Equal Justice in the Gatehouses and Mansions of American Criminal Pr...
In recent decades, few matters have split the Supreme Court, troubled the legal profession, and agit...
Commenting on why it has taken the United States so long to apply the privilege against self-incrim...
A Review of Police Interrogation and Confessions: Essays in Law and Policy by Yale Kamisa
In the police interrogation room, where, until the second third of the century, police practices wer...
In 1965, Yale Kamisar published a now-famous essay entitled, Equal Justice in the Gatehouses and Man...
In the summer of 1978, Duke Law School hosted a conference in which a variety of speakers offered pe...
My first task is to explain to some degree the nature of the problem embodied in our title. This boo...
Criminal procedure casebooks densely populate the market but rarely are reviewed. In Criminal Proced...
The world of constitutional criminal procedure is changing slowly. Repudiating much of the thinking ...
A Review of Criminal Justice in Our Time by Yale Kamisar, Fred E. Inbau, and Thurman Arnol
As Yale Kamisar\u27s writings on police interrogation demonstrate, our simultaneous commitments to p...
Forty years ago the kindling of segregation, racism, and poverty burst into the flame of urban rioti...
Professor Akhil Reed Amar and Ms. Renee B. Lettow have written a lively, provocative article that wi...
No serious student of police interrogation and confessions can write on the subject without building...
In 1965, Yale Kamisar authored “Equal Justice in the Gatehouses and Mansions of American Criminal Pr...
In recent decades, few matters have split the Supreme Court, troubled the legal profession, and agit...
Commenting on why it has taken the United States so long to apply the privilege against self-incrim...
A Review of Police Interrogation and Confessions: Essays in Law and Policy by Yale Kamisa
In the police interrogation room, where, until the second third of the century, police practices wer...
In 1965, Yale Kamisar published a now-famous essay entitled, Equal Justice in the Gatehouses and Man...
In the summer of 1978, Duke Law School hosted a conference in which a variety of speakers offered pe...
My first task is to explain to some degree the nature of the problem embodied in our title. This boo...
Criminal procedure casebooks densely populate the market but rarely are reviewed. In Criminal Proced...
The world of constitutional criminal procedure is changing slowly. Repudiating much of the thinking ...
A Review of Criminal Justice in Our Time by Yale Kamisar, Fred E. Inbau, and Thurman Arnol
As Yale Kamisar\u27s writings on police interrogation demonstrate, our simultaneous commitments to p...
Forty years ago the kindling of segregation, racism, and poverty burst into the flame of urban rioti...
Professor Akhil Reed Amar and Ms. Renee B. Lettow have written a lively, provocative article that wi...
No serious student of police interrogation and confessions can write on the subject without building...
In 1965, Yale Kamisar authored “Equal Justice in the Gatehouses and Mansions of American Criminal Pr...
In recent decades, few matters have split the Supreme Court, troubled the legal profession, and agit...
Commenting on why it has taken the United States so long to apply the privilege against self-incrim...