This Essay explores the mechanisms of control over federal criminal enforcement that the administration and Congress used or failed to use during George W. Bush\u27s presidency. It gives particular attention to Congress, not because legislators played a dominant role, but because they generally chose to play such a subordinate role. My fear is that the media focus on management inadequacies or abuses within the Justice Department during the Bush administration might lead policymakers and observers to overlook the hard questions that remain about how the federal criminal bureaucracy should be structured and guided during a period of rapidly shifting priorities and about the role Congress should play in this process
The dominant story of American political process and criminal law is one of democratic dysfunction. ...
Professor Beale\u27s Article, Too Many and Yet Too Few: New Principles to Define the Proper Limits f...
Federal prosecutors\u27 awareness of political corruption at the state and local levels has recently...
This essay – written for the annual Duke Law Journal Administrative Law Symposium – explores the mec...
This Essay explores the mechanisms of control over federal criminal enforcement that the administrat...
This article supports constraint of the modern federal criminal law regime through greater attention...
A full understanding of how the federal enforcement bureaucracy will elude us without a rich underst...
This article considers the proper role of politics in federal prosecutions, and how that bears on th...
A strategy for regaining control of federal criminal law, the reallocation of interpretive criminal ...
This article notes that throughout the presidential campaigns there has been little emphasis on crim...
As the Supreme Court reconsiders whether Congress can so freely provide for criminal enforcement of ...
Much of the literature on federal criminal law bemoans the extent to which Congress has abdicated it...
For nearly 100 years courts and legal scholars have held prosecutors to the “justice” standard, mean...
One puzzle of President Obama’s presidency is why his stated commitment to criminal justice reform w...
This is a brief contribution to an issue of The Federal Sentencing Reporter directed to criminal jus...
The dominant story of American political process and criminal law is one of democratic dysfunction. ...
Professor Beale\u27s Article, Too Many and Yet Too Few: New Principles to Define the Proper Limits f...
Federal prosecutors\u27 awareness of political corruption at the state and local levels has recently...
This essay – written for the annual Duke Law Journal Administrative Law Symposium – explores the mec...
This Essay explores the mechanisms of control over federal criminal enforcement that the administrat...
This article supports constraint of the modern federal criminal law regime through greater attention...
A full understanding of how the federal enforcement bureaucracy will elude us without a rich underst...
This article considers the proper role of politics in federal prosecutions, and how that bears on th...
A strategy for regaining control of federal criminal law, the reallocation of interpretive criminal ...
This article notes that throughout the presidential campaigns there has been little emphasis on crim...
As the Supreme Court reconsiders whether Congress can so freely provide for criminal enforcement of ...
Much of the literature on federal criminal law bemoans the extent to which Congress has abdicated it...
For nearly 100 years courts and legal scholars have held prosecutors to the “justice” standard, mean...
One puzzle of President Obama’s presidency is why his stated commitment to criminal justice reform w...
This is a brief contribution to an issue of The Federal Sentencing Reporter directed to criminal jus...
The dominant story of American political process and criminal law is one of democratic dysfunction. ...
Professor Beale\u27s Article, Too Many and Yet Too Few: New Principles to Define the Proper Limits f...
Federal prosecutors\u27 awareness of political corruption at the state and local levels has recently...