Criminal defense lawyers must recognize and challenge prosecutorial misconduct whenever it occurs. In my opinion, prosecutor\u27s today wield greater power, engage in more egregious misconduct, and are less subject to judicial or bar association oversight than ever before. Few defense lawyers or commentators would disagree with these conclusions. Indeed, some types of prosecutorial misconduct have become almost “normative to the system.
Professor Gershman critically examines a series of recent Supreme Court decisions dealing with prose...
In the early 1990s, I spent a couple of years as Chief of the Criminal Division in the Office of the...
Virtually all authorities agree that the public prosecutor should be held to different standards tha...
In the first ten months of 1973, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit handed do...
The increasing number of wrongful convictions brought to light over recent years has made it evident...
For nearly eighty years, courts have offered stirring rhetoric about how prosecutors must not strike...
While most prosecutors adhere to the maxim that their primary task is to obtain just results, there ...
The key to the growing prominence of prosecutors, both in the United States and elsewhere, lies in t...
One of the predominant themes in the criminal justice literature is that prosecutors dominate the ju...
Trial prosecutors’ visible misbehavior, such as improper questioning of witnesses and improper jury ...
Although courts have traditionally relied primarily on prosecutors’ individual self-restraint and in...
The author, perhaps the nation\u27s top authority on prosecutorial misconduct, raises and analyzes t...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/facsch_bk_contributions/1136/thumbnail.jp
This Article explores the unfortunately large number of instances in which appellate courts reverse ...
Professor Gershman critically examines a series of recent Supreme Court decisions dealing with prose...
In the early 1990s, I spent a couple of years as Chief of the Criminal Division in the Office of the...
Virtually all authorities agree that the public prosecutor should be held to different standards tha...
In the first ten months of 1973, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit handed do...
The increasing number of wrongful convictions brought to light over recent years has made it evident...
For nearly eighty years, courts have offered stirring rhetoric about how prosecutors must not strike...
While most prosecutors adhere to the maxim that their primary task is to obtain just results, there ...
The key to the growing prominence of prosecutors, both in the United States and elsewhere, lies in t...
One of the predominant themes in the criminal justice literature is that prosecutors dominate the ju...
Trial prosecutors’ visible misbehavior, such as improper questioning of witnesses and improper jury ...
Although courts have traditionally relied primarily on prosecutors’ individual self-restraint and in...
The author, perhaps the nation\u27s top authority on prosecutorial misconduct, raises and analyzes t...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/facsch_bk_contributions/1136/thumbnail.jp
This Article explores the unfortunately large number of instances in which appellate courts reverse ...
Professor Gershman critically examines a series of recent Supreme Court decisions dealing with prose...
In the early 1990s, I spent a couple of years as Chief of the Criminal Division in the Office of the...
Virtually all authorities agree that the public prosecutor should be held to different standards tha...