Virtually every legal system specifies a variety of burdens of proof for different kinds of claims, and then secures each specification with another, nominally unrelated rule pertaining to relitigation. In criminal law, where a prosecutor might be required to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, the prosecutor is prevented from repeatedly drawing from the urn, as it were, by the familiar and nearly universal rule of double jeopardy. We suggest that if law were to weaken the protection, or more likely to permit the defendant to waive the double jeopardy protection, both private and social benefits might follow. The benefits derive from the notion that with a simple double jeopardy rule, the prosecutor – like most people who take a test kno...
The choice to embrace a real-offense regime probably constitutes the single most controversial decis...
This paper examines optimal prosecutor behavior with respect to plea bargaining when defendant guilt...
A preview of two 1996 Supreme Court cases. In the first case, US v. Ursery, a convicted narcotics de...
Virtually every legal system specifies a variety of burdens of proof for different kinds of claims, ...
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution protects criminal defendants against be...
In addition to protecting a criminal defendant against multiple trials, the double jeopardy clause p...
This Article will attempt to distill from this confusion a meaningful double jeopardy policy, applic...
This Note argues that the Double Jeopardy Clause bars retrial after reversals of convictions tainted...
Courts and commentators treat as axiomatic that the Double Jeopardy Clause protects against multiple...
peer-reviewedThe common law principle against double jeopardy is a proscription against retrials for...
A major concern with plea bargains is that innocent defendants will be induced to plead guilty. This...
This Note argues that once the defendant raises a nonfrivolous double jeopardy claim that turns on a...
The Double Jeopardy Clause provides that no person will “be subject for the same offence to be twice...
Courts in common law countries reject plea-agreements only when the agreed upon sentence is seen as ...
This article examines the effect of Oregon v. Kennedy on the Burger Court\u27s double jeopardy juris...
The choice to embrace a real-offense regime probably constitutes the single most controversial decis...
This paper examines optimal prosecutor behavior with respect to plea bargaining when defendant guilt...
A preview of two 1996 Supreme Court cases. In the first case, US v. Ursery, a convicted narcotics de...
Virtually every legal system specifies a variety of burdens of proof for different kinds of claims, ...
The Double Jeopardy Clause of the United States Constitution protects criminal defendants against be...
In addition to protecting a criminal defendant against multiple trials, the double jeopardy clause p...
This Article will attempt to distill from this confusion a meaningful double jeopardy policy, applic...
This Note argues that the Double Jeopardy Clause bars retrial after reversals of convictions tainted...
Courts and commentators treat as axiomatic that the Double Jeopardy Clause protects against multiple...
peer-reviewedThe common law principle against double jeopardy is a proscription against retrials for...
A major concern with plea bargains is that innocent defendants will be induced to plead guilty. This...
This Note argues that once the defendant raises a nonfrivolous double jeopardy claim that turns on a...
The Double Jeopardy Clause provides that no person will “be subject for the same offence to be twice...
Courts in common law countries reject plea-agreements only when the agreed upon sentence is seen as ...
This article examines the effect of Oregon v. Kennedy on the Burger Court\u27s double jeopardy juris...
The choice to embrace a real-offense regime probably constitutes the single most controversial decis...
This paper examines optimal prosecutor behavior with respect to plea bargaining when defendant guilt...
A preview of two 1996 Supreme Court cases. In the first case, US v. Ursery, a convicted narcotics de...