How should the legal community think about double jeopardy in the wake of the Rodney King affair? The Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment commands that no person shall be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb. At first blush, the federal civil rights trial of four Los Angeles police officers, following their acquittals in state court prosecutions, might seem a patent double jeopardy violation. However, the Supreme Court\u27s dual sovereignty doctrine provides that two different governments\u27 laws by definition cannot describe the same offence. This doctrine forecloses the police officers\u27 double jeopardy claim-the officers\u27 first trial was for state law crimes; the second, for federal...
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution protects criminal defendants against be...
In Benton v. Maryland, decided in June of this year, the Supreme Court explicitly extended fifth ame...
A preview of two 1996 Supreme Court cases. In the first case, US v. Ursery, a convicted narcotics de...
How should the legal community think about double jeopardy in the wake of the Rodney King affair? Th...
This Comment will trace the roots of the Double Jeopardy Clause of the U.S. Constitution and provide...
This Note argues that the application of the dual sovereignty doctrine to cases involving successive...
Yesterday I tried to suggest, that in doing Constitutional Law, we must think about the founding vis...
This article analyzes the U. S. constitutional law interpreting the concept of “same offence.” Inclu...
Although founding its decision upon the present inapplicability of the double jeopardy clause to the...
Every now and then a case ·comes along that tests the fundamental premises of a body of law. United ...
Familiar to most Americans, the double jeopardy clause (the clause) of the Fifth Amendment to the Un...
This Comment has been prompted by two recent United States Supreme Court decisions, Bartkus v. Illin...
Criminal defendants often are charged and convicted of multiple offenses. And often one offense is a...
Modern Supreme Court case law is full of double jeopardy double talk. Consider first the poetic phra...
This Recent Development first traces the evolution of the double jeopardy doctrine. The Recent Devel...
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution protects criminal defendants against be...
In Benton v. Maryland, decided in June of this year, the Supreme Court explicitly extended fifth ame...
A preview of two 1996 Supreme Court cases. In the first case, US v. Ursery, a convicted narcotics de...
How should the legal community think about double jeopardy in the wake of the Rodney King affair? Th...
This Comment will trace the roots of the Double Jeopardy Clause of the U.S. Constitution and provide...
This Note argues that the application of the dual sovereignty doctrine to cases involving successive...
Yesterday I tried to suggest, that in doing Constitutional Law, we must think about the founding vis...
This article analyzes the U. S. constitutional law interpreting the concept of “same offence.” Inclu...
Although founding its decision upon the present inapplicability of the double jeopardy clause to the...
Every now and then a case ·comes along that tests the fundamental premises of a body of law. United ...
Familiar to most Americans, the double jeopardy clause (the clause) of the Fifth Amendment to the Un...
This Comment has been prompted by two recent United States Supreme Court decisions, Bartkus v. Illin...
Criminal defendants often are charged and convicted of multiple offenses. And often one offense is a...
Modern Supreme Court case law is full of double jeopardy double talk. Consider first the poetic phra...
This Recent Development first traces the evolution of the double jeopardy doctrine. The Recent Devel...
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution protects criminal defendants against be...
In Benton v. Maryland, decided in June of this year, the Supreme Court explicitly extended fifth ame...
A preview of two 1996 Supreme Court cases. In the first case, US v. Ursery, a convicted narcotics de...