In one of its most controversial decisions to date, United States v Comstock, the Roberts Court upheld a federal civil commitment statute requiring only an intermediate burden of proof The statute provided for the postsentencing confinement of anyone proven by clear and convincing evidence to be mentally ill and dangerous. The law relied on a judicial standard established more than thirty years before. The majority in Comstock missed the opportunity to reassess the precedent in light of recent psychiatric studies indicating that the ambiguity of available diagnostic tools can lead to erroneous insanity assessments and mistake evaluations about patients\u27 likelihood to engage in dangerous activities. I contend that the clear and convinc...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
The shift to dangerousness-oriented civil commitment criteria has led to speculation that mentally i...
This Note first discusses recent statutory and judicial reforms of involuntary mental commitment pro...
In one of its most controversial decisions to date, United States v. Comstock, the Roberts Court uph...
In one of its most controversial decisions to date, United States v Comstock, the Roberts Court uphe...
The civil commitment of mentally ill individuals presents the legal system with an intractable quest...
When a dangerously mentally ill person is in need of in-patient psychiatric hospitalization, the app...
The Supreme Court has recognized that civil commitment constitutes a significant deprivation of libe...
When seeking to civilly commit an inmate nearing release from prison, states often adopt a formulati...
Every year, millions of Americans struggle with serious mental illness. Of them, thousands experienc...
The recently established constitutional right to an independent psychiatric examination for a crimin...
This comment advances the argument—herein referred to as the principle of equivalence—that because t...
When seeking to civilly commit an inmate nearing release from prison, states often adopt a formulati...
Nebraska\u27s procedures for the civil commitment of the mentally ill are lacking in protections for...
interpreted to assert that dangerousness is a constitutional requirement for civil commitment. This ...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
The shift to dangerousness-oriented civil commitment criteria has led to speculation that mentally i...
This Note first discusses recent statutory and judicial reforms of involuntary mental commitment pro...
In one of its most controversial decisions to date, United States v. Comstock, the Roberts Court uph...
In one of its most controversial decisions to date, United States v Comstock, the Roberts Court uphe...
The civil commitment of mentally ill individuals presents the legal system with an intractable quest...
When a dangerously mentally ill person is in need of in-patient psychiatric hospitalization, the app...
The Supreme Court has recognized that civil commitment constitutes a significant deprivation of libe...
When seeking to civilly commit an inmate nearing release from prison, states often adopt a formulati...
Every year, millions of Americans struggle with serious mental illness. Of them, thousands experienc...
The recently established constitutional right to an independent psychiatric examination for a crimin...
This comment advances the argument—herein referred to as the principle of equivalence—that because t...
When seeking to civilly commit an inmate nearing release from prison, states often adopt a formulati...
Nebraska\u27s procedures for the civil commitment of the mentally ill are lacking in protections for...
interpreted to assert that dangerousness is a constitutional requirement for civil commitment. This ...
It is often presumed that the legal rights of those who are mentally ill or alleged to be mentally i...
The shift to dangerousness-oriented civil commitment criteria has led to speculation that mentally i...
This Note first discusses recent statutory and judicial reforms of involuntary mental commitment pro...