This is a book about the legal fiction that sometimes we know what we don't. The willful ignorance doctrine says defendants who bury their heads in the sand rather than learn they're doing something criminal are punished as if they knew. Not all legal fictions are unjustified, however. This one, used within proper limits, is a defensible way to promote the aims of the criminal law. Preserving your ignorance can make you as culpable as if you knew what you were doing, and so the interests and values protected by the criminal law can be promoted by treating you as if you had knowledge. This book provides a careful defense of this method of imputing mental states based on equal culpability. On the one hand, the theory developed here shows why...
The criminal law maxim ignorance of the law is no excuse represents a broad doctrine of strict lia...
This book presents a comprehensive overview of what the criminal law would look like if organized ar...
Under the willful blindness doctrine widely employed in federal criminal prosecutions, courts expand...
This is a book about the legal fiction that sometimes we know what we don't. The willful ignorance d...
The willful ignorance doctrine says defendants should sometimes be treated as if they know what they...
According to the willful ignorance doctrine, when conviction of a crime requires knowledge of some f...
This Article investigates the limits of the willful ignorance doctrine as employed in federal crimi...
Ignorantia legis non excusat-ignorance of the law does not excuse-is a centuries-old criminal law ma...
(Excerpt) The overriding aim of this Article is to shore up the normative basis for the willful igno...
This article introduces the main conceptual and normative questions about willful ignorance. Section...
Courts commonly allow willful ignorance to satisfy the knowledge element of a crime. The traditional...
Sarch begins with a general theory of culpability to help us determine the culpability of the reckle...
In four empirical studies, we showed that laypeople apply the ignorance of the law defense different...
'Ignorance of the law is no defence,' so we are told from an early stage in our legal studies. Or, t...
Alex Sarch’s recent book, Criminally Ignorant: Why the Law Pretends We Know What We Don’t is a wonde...
The criminal law maxim ignorance of the law is no excuse represents a broad doctrine of strict lia...
This book presents a comprehensive overview of what the criminal law would look like if organized ar...
Under the willful blindness doctrine widely employed in federal criminal prosecutions, courts expand...
This is a book about the legal fiction that sometimes we know what we don't. The willful ignorance d...
The willful ignorance doctrine says defendants should sometimes be treated as if they know what they...
According to the willful ignorance doctrine, when conviction of a crime requires knowledge of some f...
This Article investigates the limits of the willful ignorance doctrine as employed in federal crimi...
Ignorantia legis non excusat-ignorance of the law does not excuse-is a centuries-old criminal law ma...
(Excerpt) The overriding aim of this Article is to shore up the normative basis for the willful igno...
This article introduces the main conceptual and normative questions about willful ignorance. Section...
Courts commonly allow willful ignorance to satisfy the knowledge element of a crime. The traditional...
Sarch begins with a general theory of culpability to help us determine the culpability of the reckle...
In four empirical studies, we showed that laypeople apply the ignorance of the law defense different...
'Ignorance of the law is no defence,' so we are told from an early stage in our legal studies. Or, t...
Alex Sarch’s recent book, Criminally Ignorant: Why the Law Pretends We Know What We Don’t is a wonde...
The criminal law maxim ignorance of the law is no excuse represents a broad doctrine of strict lia...
This book presents a comprehensive overview of what the criminal law would look like if organized ar...
Under the willful blindness doctrine widely employed in federal criminal prosecutions, courts expand...