This report discusses Justice John Paul Stevens' opinions on the Jury's role in criminal sentencing. Justice Stevens has played a critical role in the Supreme Court's interpretation of a jury's role in criminal sentencing. In 2000, he wrote the majority opinion for the Court in Apprendi v. New Jersey, a landmark case in which the Court held that a judge typically may not increase a sentence beyond the range prescribed by statute unless the increase is based on facts determined by a jury "beyond a reasonable doubt." In 2005, he wrote one of two majority opinions in United States v. Booker, in which the Court applied the Apprendi rule to the Federal Sentencing Guidelines. In those two cases and in several other cases on this issue during the ...
Sixth Amendment--Allocation of Fact-finding in Sentencing.--Apprendi v. New Jersey spawned a series ...
This Note examines the inherent conflict among the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, judicial discretio...
A recent study of death penalty cases has revealed that judges, who are ordinarily thought of as the...
Historically, the American legal system has accorded juries wide discretion to impose sentences in t...
United States v. Booker held that the Federal Sentencing Guidelines ( Guidelines ), as they were app...
This comment explores the true impact of the 2000 landmark decision, Apprendi v. New Jersey, in whic...
This encyclopedia entry summarizes the pendulum-swings that led the Supreme Court in Apprendi v. New...
This report briefly surveys decisions of retiring Justice John Paul Stevens in death penalty cases. ...
For fifteen years, sentencing in federal court had been governed by the United States Sentencing Gu...
Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch recently noted that “juries in our constitutional order exercise ...
In Apprendi v. New Jersey, the Supreme Court ruled that any fact that increases the penalty for a cr...
In Kimbrough v. United States the U.S. Supreme Court addressed a question left open in United States...
Every year hundreds of thousands of convicted criminal defendants are sentenced for their crimes, of...
The Court in Apprendi v. New Jersey, ___ U.S. ___ (2000), held as a matter of due process that any f...
At trial, defendants are afforded a panoply of rights right to counsel, to proof beyond a reasonable...
Sixth Amendment--Allocation of Fact-finding in Sentencing.--Apprendi v. New Jersey spawned a series ...
This Note examines the inherent conflict among the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, judicial discretio...
A recent study of death penalty cases has revealed that judges, who are ordinarily thought of as the...
Historically, the American legal system has accorded juries wide discretion to impose sentences in t...
United States v. Booker held that the Federal Sentencing Guidelines ( Guidelines ), as they were app...
This comment explores the true impact of the 2000 landmark decision, Apprendi v. New Jersey, in whic...
This encyclopedia entry summarizes the pendulum-swings that led the Supreme Court in Apprendi v. New...
This report briefly surveys decisions of retiring Justice John Paul Stevens in death penalty cases. ...
For fifteen years, sentencing in federal court had been governed by the United States Sentencing Gu...
Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch recently noted that “juries in our constitutional order exercise ...
In Apprendi v. New Jersey, the Supreme Court ruled that any fact that increases the penalty for a cr...
In Kimbrough v. United States the U.S. Supreme Court addressed a question left open in United States...
Every year hundreds of thousands of convicted criminal defendants are sentenced for their crimes, of...
The Court in Apprendi v. New Jersey, ___ U.S. ___ (2000), held as a matter of due process that any f...
At trial, defendants are afforded a panoply of rights right to counsel, to proof beyond a reasonable...
Sixth Amendment--Allocation of Fact-finding in Sentencing.--Apprendi v. New Jersey spawned a series ...
This Note examines the inherent conflict among the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, judicial discretio...
A recent study of death penalty cases has revealed that judges, who are ordinarily thought of as the...