In recent years, we have discovered a spate of factually innocent people who have been convicted. In this article, Professor Loewy contends that the failure of juries to take reasonable doubt seriously contributes to this phenomenon. Professor Loewy via an illustrative fictitious case explains that juries might be reluctant to give the defendant the benefit of a reasonable doubt because of their concern about putting dangerous criminals back on the street. He then asks whether we really want juries to take reasonable doubt seriously. Concluding that we do, he examines how we can do that. Loewy concludes that the best way to that is with a jury instruction that sharply distinguishes proof beyond a reasonable doubt from clear and convincing e...
It is a "bedrock" principle of our criminal jurisprudence, that the state has the burden of proving ...
The last few decades have seen several scholars and courts striving to understand the meaning of the...
Explanationist accounts of rational legal proof view trials as a competition between explanations. S...
Ultimately, this article is about how well different definitions of reasonable doubt fit society\u27...
This article contributes in three ways to the prior literature on the reasonable doubt standard. Fir...
This article contributes in three ways to the prior literature on the reasonable doubt standard. Fir...
The standard of criminal proof beyond a reasonable doubt is believed almost everywhere to be a bulwa...
abstract: The purpose of this paper is to make the beyond a reasonable doubt standard in criminal tr...
The law is axiomatic. In order to convict a person of a crime, every element of the crime with which...
2014-04-26The doctrine of reasonable doubt is deeply entrenched within American culture, but the con...
The “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard has long been a point of contention with regard to juror un...
Part I of this article briefly discusses the concept of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, along with ...
In these essays, the authors explore different views of the criminal trial as a means of determining...
Unlike in the US and Commonwealth jury systems, where judges give defined or undefined `beyond reaso...
The reasonable doubt rule is notoriously difficult to define, and many judges and scholars have de...
It is a "bedrock" principle of our criminal jurisprudence, that the state has the burden of proving ...
The last few decades have seen several scholars and courts striving to understand the meaning of the...
Explanationist accounts of rational legal proof view trials as a competition between explanations. S...
Ultimately, this article is about how well different definitions of reasonable doubt fit society\u27...
This article contributes in three ways to the prior literature on the reasonable doubt standard. Fir...
This article contributes in three ways to the prior literature on the reasonable doubt standard. Fir...
The standard of criminal proof beyond a reasonable doubt is believed almost everywhere to be a bulwa...
abstract: The purpose of this paper is to make the beyond a reasonable doubt standard in criminal tr...
The law is axiomatic. In order to convict a person of a crime, every element of the crime with which...
2014-04-26The doctrine of reasonable doubt is deeply entrenched within American culture, but the con...
The “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard has long been a point of contention with regard to juror un...
Part I of this article briefly discusses the concept of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, along with ...
In these essays, the authors explore different views of the criminal trial as a means of determining...
Unlike in the US and Commonwealth jury systems, where judges give defined or undefined `beyond reaso...
The reasonable doubt rule is notoriously difficult to define, and many judges and scholars have de...
It is a "bedrock" principle of our criminal jurisprudence, that the state has the burden of proving ...
The last few decades have seen several scholars and courts striving to understand the meaning of the...
Explanationist accounts of rational legal proof view trials as a competition between explanations. S...