Is a criminal defendant who discharges a weapon five times in rapid succession guilty of one crime or several crimes? This question of how to divide charges has vexed legal philosophers and Supreme Court Justices. It is a question of profound importance, but one that legal scholarship has seldom addressed. The answer has an impact on each stage of a criminal justice prosecution. The difference between one charge and multiple charges can affect the likelihood of a plea bargain, the strategy for trial, and, if the defendant is convicted, the length of a prison sentence. This Note, citing numerous examples of these cases, shows that the decision to charge a defendant with multiple offenses is often arbitrary and inconsistent. This Note first c...
The Ohio Allied Offense Statute is a codification of the common law doctrine of merger and is the Oh...
The multiple offender will receive a shorter (perhaps much shorter) sentence if she or he is dealt w...
Part II will examine the historical development and the Supreme Court\u27s application of the so- ca...
Is a criminal defendant who discharges a weapon five times in rapid succession guilty of one crime o...
This article, part of a symposium on prosecutorial discretion, uses the Martha Stewart case to look ...
When the government wants to impose exceptionally harsh punishment on a criminal defendant, one of t...
This Note argues that the Multiple Punishment Doctrine prohibits the imposition of concurrent convic...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
The Fifth Amendment provides that no person shall be subject for the same offence to be twice put i...
The gist of the crime of larceny both at common law and under statutes is a fraudulent taking of the...
This Note outlines the history and development of the petty offense exception and the Supreme Court\...
More than half of federal criminal defendants are charged with multiple offenses in a single indictm...
Constitutional scholars have long debated the relative merits of a conduct-based compulsory joinder ...
This book elaborates on the rules governing the prosecution and sentencing of multi-offenders. The ...
The Ohio Allied Offense Statute is a codification of the common law doctrine of merger and is the Oh...
The multiple offender will receive a shorter (perhaps much shorter) sentence if she or he is dealt w...
Part II will examine the historical development and the Supreme Court\u27s application of the so- ca...
Is a criminal defendant who discharges a weapon five times in rapid succession guilty of one crime o...
This article, part of a symposium on prosecutorial discretion, uses the Martha Stewart case to look ...
When the government wants to impose exceptionally harsh punishment on a criminal defendant, one of t...
This Note argues that the Multiple Punishment Doctrine prohibits the imposition of concurrent convic...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
There has been a remarkable increase during the last decade in the imposition of overlapping civil, ...
The Fifth Amendment provides that no person shall be subject for the same offence to be twice put i...
The gist of the crime of larceny both at common law and under statutes is a fraudulent taking of the...
This Note outlines the history and development of the petty offense exception and the Supreme Court\...
More than half of federal criminal defendants are charged with multiple offenses in a single indictm...
Constitutional scholars have long debated the relative merits of a conduct-based compulsory joinder ...
This book elaborates on the rules governing the prosecution and sentencing of multi-offenders. The ...
The Ohio Allied Offense Statute is a codification of the common law doctrine of merger and is the Oh...
The multiple offender will receive a shorter (perhaps much shorter) sentence if she or he is dealt w...
Part II will examine the historical development and the Supreme Court\u27s application of the so- ca...