This Article evaluates the federal Indian country criminal justice regime, not against norms of Indian law and policy, but against those of criminal law and policy. Specifically, this Article evaluates the federal constitutional norms that lie at the heart of American criminal justice and that are designed to ensure the legitimacy of federal criminal trials. Toward that end, Part I presents a critical description of key facets of the federal Indian country criminal justice system. Part II begins the critical evaluation by evaluating a key institutional player in the federal system, the federal prosecutor. It highlights the handicaps faced by federal prosecutors in Indian country prosecutions and questions whether prosecutorial discretion ca...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Dep...
The juvenile justice system in Indian country is broken. Native youth are vulnerable and traumatized...
Indian tribes in the United States are separate sovereigns with inherent self-governing authority. A...
State and federal courts increasingly are being confronted with prosecutors moving the court to cons...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
The boundaries of modern tribal criminal jurisdiction are defined by a handful of clear rules—such a...
The criminal justice administration has failed the American Indian. Since the usurpation of traditio...
Over the past 500 years, American Indians have been subjected to inequalities through the United Sta...
Unlike most sovereigns, American Indian tribes cannot exercise full territorial criminal jurisdictio...
Under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, federal jury pools must reflect a fair ...
This article critiques a proposal to include tribal court criminal convictions and sentences in the ...
State and federal courts increasingly are being confronted with prosecutors moving the court to cons...
The dual-sovereignty doctrine is a significant carve-out to the Fifth Amendment’s Double Jeopardy Cl...
The impetus for this presentation is the establishment of the Tribal Court Criminal Defense Clinic b...
This Note argues that the current federal laws regarding tribal criminal jurisdiction are contrary t...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Dep...
The juvenile justice system in Indian country is broken. Native youth are vulnerable and traumatized...
Indian tribes in the United States are separate sovereigns with inherent self-governing authority. A...
State and federal courts increasingly are being confronted with prosecutors moving the court to cons...
The thesis of this article is that by examining Federal Indian Law one better understands that the A...
The boundaries of modern tribal criminal jurisdiction are defined by a handful of clear rules—such a...
The criminal justice administration has failed the American Indian. Since the usurpation of traditio...
Over the past 500 years, American Indians have been subjected to inequalities through the United Sta...
Unlike most sovereigns, American Indian tribes cannot exercise full territorial criminal jurisdictio...
Under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, federal jury pools must reflect a fair ...
This article critiques a proposal to include tribal court criminal convictions and sentences in the ...
State and federal courts increasingly are being confronted with prosecutors moving the court to cons...
The dual-sovereignty doctrine is a significant carve-out to the Fifth Amendment’s Double Jeopardy Cl...
The impetus for this presentation is the establishment of the Tribal Court Criminal Defense Clinic b...
This Note argues that the current federal laws regarding tribal criminal jurisdiction are contrary t...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Dep...
The juvenile justice system in Indian country is broken. Native youth are vulnerable and traumatized...
Indian tribes in the United States are separate sovereigns with inherent self-governing authority. A...