This article seeks to promote a conversation about how prosecutors, particularly in misdemeanor cases with identifiable victims, should take account of what victims want, including what they regard as the just result. The criminal law assumes that victims want retribution, which means incarcerating offenders, and prosecutors’ offices largely accept that premise. We argue that in a process that generally is weighted toward punishment and excessive use of state power, prosecutors should ascertain victims’ actual views and take them into account as a counterweight. That is, when prosecutors would otherwise pursue a misdemeanor prosecution, they should generally defer to victims’ informed and reasoned preferences for nonprosecution and noncarce...
The criminal offender often commits two distinct wrongs with each criminal act. First, the offender ...
Criminal law systems throughout the world have evolved to a stage where they no longer ask, What is...
In Against Prosecutors, Bennett Capers proposes that we largely abandon the current system of public...
Often, discussions of wrongful convictions focus almost entirely on the wrongfully convicted and ign...
In Against Prosecutors, Bennett Capers presents thought-provoking arguments for empowering victims i...
article published in law journalThis essay does not promote the Victims' Rights Amendment16 or advoc...
Violent-crime survivors have powerful stories to tell. Prosecutors use these stories to convict the ...
A theoretical underpinning of the American system of criminal justice is the notion that a criminal ...
Crime victims are currently being given the right to participate in criminal prosecutions at both th...
This Article will discuss the obligations and duties of a prosecutor in reviewing post-conviction cl...
The thesis of this article is that the public prosecutor should to have a monopoly on criminal prose...
This article considers the criminal justice system from the crime victim\u27s perspective. Victims ...
Modern criminal law is intensely one-sided in its treatment of victims and defendants. Crime victims...
Traditionally, discussions of prosecutorial discretion focus on charging and plea bargaining decisio...
Against the backdrop of the prosecutorial reform movement, this Article explores the origins of the ...
The criminal offender often commits two distinct wrongs with each criminal act. First, the offender ...
Criminal law systems throughout the world have evolved to a stage where they no longer ask, What is...
In Against Prosecutors, Bennett Capers proposes that we largely abandon the current system of public...
Often, discussions of wrongful convictions focus almost entirely on the wrongfully convicted and ign...
In Against Prosecutors, Bennett Capers presents thought-provoking arguments for empowering victims i...
article published in law journalThis essay does not promote the Victims' Rights Amendment16 or advoc...
Violent-crime survivors have powerful stories to tell. Prosecutors use these stories to convict the ...
A theoretical underpinning of the American system of criminal justice is the notion that a criminal ...
Crime victims are currently being given the right to participate in criminal prosecutions at both th...
This Article will discuss the obligations and duties of a prosecutor in reviewing post-conviction cl...
The thesis of this article is that the public prosecutor should to have a monopoly on criminal prose...
This article considers the criminal justice system from the crime victim\u27s perspective. Victims ...
Modern criminal law is intensely one-sided in its treatment of victims and defendants. Crime victims...
Traditionally, discussions of prosecutorial discretion focus on charging and plea bargaining decisio...
Against the backdrop of the prosecutorial reform movement, this Article explores the origins of the ...
The criminal offender often commits two distinct wrongs with each criminal act. First, the offender ...
Criminal law systems throughout the world have evolved to a stage where they no longer ask, What is...
In Against Prosecutors, Bennett Capers proposes that we largely abandon the current system of public...