The United States is the only country that elects its local prosecutors. In theory, these local elections could facilitate local control of criminal justice policy. But the academic literature assumes that, in practice, prosecutor elections fail to live up to that promise. This Article complicates that conventional wisdom with a new, national study of campaign contributions in prosecutor accountability by analyzing contributions to local candidates as well as their election results. It details the amount of money in local prosecutor elections, including from interest groups, and the relationship between candidate fundraising and success. The stark differences across the country underscore that the more than two thousand local prosecutors ar...
Prosecutors routinely decline to file charges in individual cases; sometimes they also announce gene...
At present, campaign finance regulations may only be justified if their primary purpose is to preven...
This short essay responds to Adam Gershowitz’s and Laura Killinger’s article The State (Never) Rests...
The conventional academic wisdom is that prosecutor elections are little more than empty exercises. ...
Do campaign contributions impact democratic processes? Using donation data from Texas, we show that ...
This paper analyzes how the budget allocated to state prosecutors varies from one district to anothe...
Money matters. Given the empirical data presented in this Article, it is fair to draw the assumption...
Prosecutors in the United States may be either appointed or elected officials. They are also bureau ...
Voters were meant to check prosecutors’ decisions, but that check has eroded because voters lack the...
Prosecutors are the most powerful organs of the criminal justice system, enjoying discretion in deci...
With little oversight, high levels of discretion, and regular partisan elecitons, it is plausible th...
Part I of this Article reviews the existing evidence about the election of criminal justice official...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
For nearly sixty years, the U.S. Supreme Court has affirmed that the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Con...
In the aftermath of the indictment of New York state assembly speaker Sheldon Silver on corruption c...
Prosecutors routinely decline to file charges in individual cases; sometimes they also announce gene...
At present, campaign finance regulations may only be justified if their primary purpose is to preven...
This short essay responds to Adam Gershowitz’s and Laura Killinger’s article The State (Never) Rests...
The conventional academic wisdom is that prosecutor elections are little more than empty exercises. ...
Do campaign contributions impact democratic processes? Using donation data from Texas, we show that ...
This paper analyzes how the budget allocated to state prosecutors varies from one district to anothe...
Money matters. Given the empirical data presented in this Article, it is fair to draw the assumption...
Prosecutors in the United States may be either appointed or elected officials. They are also bureau ...
Voters were meant to check prosecutors’ decisions, but that check has eroded because voters lack the...
Prosecutors are the most powerful organs of the criminal justice system, enjoying discretion in deci...
With little oversight, high levels of discretion, and regular partisan elecitons, it is plausible th...
Part I of this Article reviews the existing evidence about the election of criminal justice official...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
For nearly sixty years, the U.S. Supreme Court has affirmed that the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Con...
In the aftermath of the indictment of New York state assembly speaker Sheldon Silver on corruption c...
Prosecutors routinely decline to file charges in individual cases; sometimes they also announce gene...
At present, campaign finance regulations may only be justified if their primary purpose is to preven...
This short essay responds to Adam Gershowitz’s and Laura Killinger’s article The State (Never) Rests...