There are powerful historical, constitutional, empirical, and policy justifications for a return to the practice of having juries, not judges, impose sentences in criminal cases. The fact that Americans inherited from the English a mild preference for judge sentencing was more a historical accident than a case of thoughtful policy. Jury sentencing became quite widespread in the colonial and postcolonial eras as a reflection of deep-seated mistrust of the judiciary. The gradual drift away from jury sentencing was driven not by a new-found faith in the judiciary, but rather by the now discredited paradigm of rehabilitationism. Now that that paradigm has shifted to neoretribution, and that the essential moral character of the criminal law has ...
This Article guides Texas practitioners in effectively preparing and presenting criminal cases on ap...
The U.S. Supreme Court’s 2016 decision in Hurst v. Florida, which struck down Florida’s capital sent...
The fate of stare decisis hangs in the wind. Different factions of the Supreme Court are now engaged...
This is the first of two articles, the second of which will appear in January 2002 edition of the Io...
This article explores the policy issues raised by the choice between a custom-based standard of care...
Procedure is a mechanism for expressing political and social relationships and is a device for produ...
But the Supreme Court and other appellate courts have failed to follow any consistent practice about...
This paper examines the criminal prosecution of Milberg Weiss, formerly the most successful plaintif...
Bernard S. Meyer‘s great professional ambition was to be a judge on the New York Court of Appeals. H...
This study investigated the effects of judicial instructions to disregard the defendantâs failure to...
This Article argues for an expanded understanding of legal punishment for American courts to use. Pu...
This Article explores the possible role of the attorney disciplinary process in discouraging prosecu...
In most courts, a statement in an opinion is a holding only if it was necessary for the outcome of t...
This article considers many commonly advanced criticisms of the adversary system. It provides an an...
This article analyzes recent developments in Florida criminal law. The areas discussed include const...
This Article guides Texas practitioners in effectively preparing and presenting criminal cases on ap...
The U.S. Supreme Court’s 2016 decision in Hurst v. Florida, which struck down Florida’s capital sent...
The fate of stare decisis hangs in the wind. Different factions of the Supreme Court are now engaged...
This is the first of two articles, the second of which will appear in January 2002 edition of the Io...
This article explores the policy issues raised by the choice between a custom-based standard of care...
Procedure is a mechanism for expressing political and social relationships and is a device for produ...
But the Supreme Court and other appellate courts have failed to follow any consistent practice about...
This paper examines the criminal prosecution of Milberg Weiss, formerly the most successful plaintif...
Bernard S. Meyer‘s great professional ambition was to be a judge on the New York Court of Appeals. H...
This study investigated the effects of judicial instructions to disregard the defendantâs failure to...
This Article argues for an expanded understanding of legal punishment for American courts to use. Pu...
This Article explores the possible role of the attorney disciplinary process in discouraging prosecu...
In most courts, a statement in an opinion is a holding only if it was necessary for the outcome of t...
This article considers many commonly advanced criticisms of the adversary system. It provides an an...
This article analyzes recent developments in Florida criminal law. The areas discussed include const...
This Article guides Texas practitioners in effectively preparing and presenting criminal cases on ap...
The U.S. Supreme Court’s 2016 decision in Hurst v. Florida, which struck down Florida’s capital sent...
The fate of stare decisis hangs in the wind. Different factions of the Supreme Court are now engaged...