Jury sentencing in non-capital cases is one of the least understood procedures in contemporary American criminal justice. This Article looks beyond idealized visions of jury sentencing to examine for the first time how felony jury sentencing actually operates in three different states - Kentucky, Virginia, and Arkansas. Dozens of interviews with prosecutors, defenders, and judges, as well as an analysis of state sentencing data, reveal that this neglected corner of state criminal justice provides a unique window through which one can observe some of the most fundamental forces operating in criminal adjudication today. It turns out that jury sentencing in practice looks very little like jury sentencing in theory. Sentencing by jury is promot...
The research reported in this Essay examines process discounts-differences in sentences imposed for ...
Historically, the American legal system has accorded juries wide discretion to impose sentences in t...
Sentencing has become the most important part of a criminal case. Over the past century, criminal tr...
Jury sentencing in non-capital cases is one of the least understood procedures in contemporary Ameri...
This Article traces the development of jury sentencing in non-capital felony cases in Virginia and K...
Drawing upon a recent study of felony jury sentencing in Kentucky, Virginia, and Arkansas, this essa...
After a century of reform and experimentation, sentencing remains a highly contested area of the cri...
The Court\u27s recent decision in Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466 (2000), has prompted renewed ...
Critics of jury sentencing in noncapital cases complain that jurors are less competent or qualified ...
In this Article, the authors look at jury selection from the viewpoint of citizens and voters, stand...
In June, 1968 the Kentucky Crime Commission, in keeping with legislative instruction, made certain r...
The punishment stage of a jury trial poses a difficult test for the conflicting attitudes and opinio...
The American jury, once heralded as “the great corrective of law in its actual administration,” has ...
This Article empirically illustrates that the introduction of voluntary and presumptive sentencing g...
Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch recently noted that “juries in our constitutional order exercise ...
The research reported in this Essay examines process discounts-differences in sentences imposed for ...
Historically, the American legal system has accorded juries wide discretion to impose sentences in t...
Sentencing has become the most important part of a criminal case. Over the past century, criminal tr...
Jury sentencing in non-capital cases is one of the least understood procedures in contemporary Ameri...
This Article traces the development of jury sentencing in non-capital felony cases in Virginia and K...
Drawing upon a recent study of felony jury sentencing in Kentucky, Virginia, and Arkansas, this essa...
After a century of reform and experimentation, sentencing remains a highly contested area of the cri...
The Court\u27s recent decision in Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466 (2000), has prompted renewed ...
Critics of jury sentencing in noncapital cases complain that jurors are less competent or qualified ...
In this Article, the authors look at jury selection from the viewpoint of citizens and voters, stand...
In June, 1968 the Kentucky Crime Commission, in keeping with legislative instruction, made certain r...
The punishment stage of a jury trial poses a difficult test for the conflicting attitudes and opinio...
The American jury, once heralded as “the great corrective of law in its actual administration,” has ...
This Article empirically illustrates that the introduction of voluntary and presumptive sentencing g...
Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch recently noted that “juries in our constitutional order exercise ...
The research reported in this Essay examines process discounts-differences in sentences imposed for ...
Historically, the American legal system has accorded juries wide discretion to impose sentences in t...
Sentencing has become the most important part of a criminal case. Over the past century, criminal tr...