Plea bargaining in the United States is in critical respects unregulated, and a key reason is the marginal role to which judges have been relegated. In the wake of Santobello v. New York (1971), lower courts crafted Due Process doctrines through which they supervised the fairness of some aspects of the plea bargaining process. Within a decade, however, U.S. Supreme Court decisions began to shut down any constitutional basis for judicial supervision of plea negotiations or agreements. Those decisions rested primarily on two claims: separation of powers and the practical costs of regulating plea bargaining in busy criminal justice systems. Both rationales proved enormously influential. Legislative rulemaking and state courts both largely foll...
Padilla v. Kentucky was a watershed in the Court’s turn to regulating plea bargaining. For decades, ...
In Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that plea bargaining, although ...
This paper analyzes plea bargaining and plea negotiation in the American judicial system. Plea barga...
Plea bargaining in the United States is in critical respects unregulated, and a key reason is the ma...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
The role of judges in processing criminal legal conflicts has changed dramatically in the past decad...
America’s plea-bargaining system is famously informal. While there is a smattering of state and fede...
In Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, the Supreme Court recently ruled in favor of criminal defe...
The topic of judicial involvement in plea negotiations is a controversial issue, with potential bene...
The topic of judicial involvement in plea negotiations is a controversial issue, with potential bene...
The topic of judicial involvement in plea negotiations is a controversial issue, with potential bene...
In the 2012 companion cases of Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, the United States Supreme Cour...
Padilla v. Kentucky was a watershed in the Court’s turn to regulating plea bargaining. For decades, ...
In Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that plea bargaining, although ...
This paper analyzes plea bargaining and plea negotiation in the American judicial system. Plea barga...
Plea bargaining in the United States is in critical respects unregulated, and a key reason is the ma...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
Current rules in most U.S. jurisdictions prohibit judges from becoming involved in plea negotiations...
The role of judges in processing criminal legal conflicts has changed dramatically in the past decad...
America’s plea-bargaining system is famously informal. While there is a smattering of state and fede...
In Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, the Supreme Court recently ruled in favor of criminal defe...
The topic of judicial involvement in plea negotiations is a controversial issue, with potential bene...
The topic of judicial involvement in plea negotiations is a controversial issue, with potential bene...
The topic of judicial involvement in plea negotiations is a controversial issue, with potential bene...
In the 2012 companion cases of Lafler v. Cooper and Missouri v. Frye, the United States Supreme Cour...
Padilla v. Kentucky was a watershed in the Court’s turn to regulating plea bargaining. For decades, ...
In Missouri v. Frye and Lafler v. Cooper, the Supreme Court affirmed that plea bargaining, although ...
This paper analyzes plea bargaining and plea negotiation in the American judicial system. Plea barga...