Since the Booker decision, Congress has demonstrated, for the most part, remarkable restraint against tinkering with the system, a fact owed in large measure to the efforts of the United States Sentencing Commission to keep Congress informed about federal sentencing trends. The Commission has done an admirable job in turning around its data collection, analysis, and reporting functions to provide Congress, and the entire criminal justice system, with useful statistics and information that suggest the system is not falling apart. For example, the Commission\u27s efforts demonstrate, as Frank Bowman noted, that the average sentence in federal cases did rise between the pre-Booker 2005 time period (median sentences of 43.8 months) and fiscal...
The Article argues in favor of shifting the balance in federal sentencing toward a more indeterminat...
United States v. Booker held that the Federal Sentencing Guidelines ( Guidelines ), as they were app...
This Article proposes a simplified sentencing table consisting of nine base sentencing ranges, each ...
Since the Booker decision, Congress has demonstrated, for the most part, remarkable restraint agains...
This Note examines the inherent conflict among the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, judicial discretio...
Criminal sentencing does not just happen in the courtroom. Some key sentencing decisions happen long...
The Columbia Law Review\u27s Symposium on sentencing, which took place less than two weeks after the...
By declaring that the Federal Sentencing Guidelines are no longer fully binding law and thereby sh...
The Article first provides an overview of the history and prevailing motivations behind the promulga...
This is the third in a series of articles analyzing the current turmoil in federal criminal sentenci...
This article argues that in addition to the swing toward increased judicial discretion and overall l...
As the Supreme Court has turned federal sentencing upside down in Booker, it has left a host of open...
In the two years since the landmark Booker decision, federal sentencing policy has been in a state o...
This Note will explore the rarely discussed consequences that result when courts of appeals freely i...
This article charts a path for criminal sentencing in the wake of the Supreme Court’s recent bombshe...
The Article argues in favor of shifting the balance in federal sentencing toward a more indeterminat...
United States v. Booker held that the Federal Sentencing Guidelines ( Guidelines ), as they were app...
This Article proposes a simplified sentencing table consisting of nine base sentencing ranges, each ...
Since the Booker decision, Congress has demonstrated, for the most part, remarkable restraint agains...
This Note examines the inherent conflict among the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, judicial discretio...
Criminal sentencing does not just happen in the courtroom. Some key sentencing decisions happen long...
The Columbia Law Review\u27s Symposium on sentencing, which took place less than two weeks after the...
By declaring that the Federal Sentencing Guidelines are no longer fully binding law and thereby sh...
The Article first provides an overview of the history and prevailing motivations behind the promulga...
This is the third in a series of articles analyzing the current turmoil in federal criminal sentenci...
This article argues that in addition to the swing toward increased judicial discretion and overall l...
As the Supreme Court has turned federal sentencing upside down in Booker, it has left a host of open...
In the two years since the landmark Booker decision, federal sentencing policy has been in a state o...
This Note will explore the rarely discussed consequences that result when courts of appeals freely i...
This article charts a path for criminal sentencing in the wake of the Supreme Court’s recent bombshe...
The Article argues in favor of shifting the balance in federal sentencing toward a more indeterminat...
United States v. Booker held that the Federal Sentencing Guidelines ( Guidelines ), as they were app...
This Article proposes a simplified sentencing table consisting of nine base sentencing ranges, each ...