When jurors are presented with a menu of criminal verdict options and they cannot reach a consensus among them, what should they do? Available evidence suggests they are prone to compromise—that is, jurors will negotiate with each other and settle on a verdict in the middle, often on a lesser-included offense. The suggestion that jurors compromise is not new; it is supported by empirical evidence, well-accepted by courts and commentators, and unsurprising given the pressure jurors feel to reach agreement and the different individual views they likely hold. There are, however, some who say intrajury negotiation represents a failure of the jury process. Conventional wisdom clings to the notion that criminal verdicts reflect a jury’s unanimous...
This report on plea bargaining was written for the Academy for Justice, a collaborative research p...
This paper examines optimal prosecutor behavior with respect to plea bargaining when defendant guilt...
The vast majority of criminal prosecutions are concluded not by trial but by a guilty plea,\u27 whic...
When jurors are presented with a menu of criminal verdict options and they cannot reach a consensus ...
We consider a model of the criminal court process, focusing on plea bargaining. A plea bargain prov...
Settlement is a term rarely used in criminal law. Instead, people speak almost exclusively of plea b...
The role of judges in processing criminal legal conflicts has changed dramatically in the past decad...
Research on juror decision-making has been vast. Research on plea-bargaining, in contrast, has been ...
Plea negotiations are frequently criticized on the basis that they may arise from deception, coercio...
We study the criminal court process focusing on the interaction between plea bargaining and jury tr...
Plea bargaining happens in almost every criminal case, yet there is little empirical study about wha...
This paper analyzes plea bargaining and plea negotiation in the American judicial system. Plea barga...
Most criminal prosecutions are settled without a trial. The parties to these settlements trade vario...
Over the years, criminal justice systems across the world have seen an unprecedented rise in the use...
Juries are tasked with the duty of deliberating and applying the law to the case at hand. But it is ...
This report on plea bargaining was written for the Academy for Justice, a collaborative research p...
This paper examines optimal prosecutor behavior with respect to plea bargaining when defendant guilt...
The vast majority of criminal prosecutions are concluded not by trial but by a guilty plea,\u27 whic...
When jurors are presented with a menu of criminal verdict options and they cannot reach a consensus ...
We consider a model of the criminal court process, focusing on plea bargaining. A plea bargain prov...
Settlement is a term rarely used in criminal law. Instead, people speak almost exclusively of plea b...
The role of judges in processing criminal legal conflicts has changed dramatically in the past decad...
Research on juror decision-making has been vast. Research on plea-bargaining, in contrast, has been ...
Plea negotiations are frequently criticized on the basis that they may arise from deception, coercio...
We study the criminal court process focusing on the interaction between plea bargaining and jury tr...
Plea bargaining happens in almost every criminal case, yet there is little empirical study about wha...
This paper analyzes plea bargaining and plea negotiation in the American judicial system. Plea barga...
Most criminal prosecutions are settled without a trial. The parties to these settlements trade vario...
Over the years, criminal justice systems across the world have seen an unprecedented rise in the use...
Juries are tasked with the duty of deliberating and applying the law to the case at hand. But it is ...
This report on plea bargaining was written for the Academy for Justice, a collaborative research p...
This paper examines optimal prosecutor behavior with respect to plea bargaining when defendant guilt...
The vast majority of criminal prosecutions are concluded not by trial but by a guilty plea,\u27 whic...