Abstract: In criminal cases at common law, juries are permitted to convict on wholly circumstantial evidence even in the face of a reasonable case for acquittal. This generates the highly counterintuitive—if not absurd— consequence that there being reason to think that the accused didn’t do it is not reason to doubt that he did. This is the no-reason-to-doubt problem. It has a technical solution provided that the evidence on which it is reasonable to think that the accused didn’t do it is a different subset of the total evidence from that on which there is no reason to doubt that he did do it. It lies in the adversarial nature of criminal proceedings in the common law tradition that the subsets of the total evidence on which counsel base th...
This article explores some of the differences between the common law and civilian legal systems with...
Introduction: Throughout the web of the English Criminal Law one golden thread is always to be seen,...
The issue of the implications which pre-trial police or prosecutorial improprieties should have for ...
In criminal cases at common law, juries are permitted to convict on wholly circumstantial evidence e...
There seems to be apparent judicial conflict as to the quantum of evidence required when the case fo...
The Criminal Abduction Paradox In criminal trials at common law there is an apparent clash of legal ...
Comparative research of criminal justice systems is still in its infancy. It is not surprising, then...
This paper analyzes the three components of the evidence operation: proof premises or evidence in th...
Unlike in the US and Commonwealth jury systems, where judges give defined or undefined `beyond reaso...
That the preponderance of the evidence should determine civil cases has long been taken for granted,...
This paper primarily deals with the standard of proof in criminal cases where the evidence against ...
same line by a Newton. There have been improvements since Bentham\u27s jeremiad. But Anglo-American ...
Any fair and effective criminal justice system must ensure that evidence of guilt will be decisively...
Similar fact evidence raises in a particularly acute form the conflict between two competing princip...
Most apparent differences between US and continental law lose their relevance once one looks beneath...
This article explores some of the differences between the common law and civilian legal systems with...
Introduction: Throughout the web of the English Criminal Law one golden thread is always to be seen,...
The issue of the implications which pre-trial police or prosecutorial improprieties should have for ...
In criminal cases at common law, juries are permitted to convict on wholly circumstantial evidence e...
There seems to be apparent judicial conflict as to the quantum of evidence required when the case fo...
The Criminal Abduction Paradox In criminal trials at common law there is an apparent clash of legal ...
Comparative research of criminal justice systems is still in its infancy. It is not surprising, then...
This paper analyzes the three components of the evidence operation: proof premises or evidence in th...
Unlike in the US and Commonwealth jury systems, where judges give defined or undefined `beyond reaso...
That the preponderance of the evidence should determine civil cases has long been taken for granted,...
This paper primarily deals with the standard of proof in criminal cases where the evidence against ...
same line by a Newton. There have been improvements since Bentham\u27s jeremiad. But Anglo-American ...
Any fair and effective criminal justice system must ensure that evidence of guilt will be decisively...
Similar fact evidence raises in a particularly acute form the conflict between two competing princip...
Most apparent differences between US and continental law lose their relevance once one looks beneath...
This article explores some of the differences between the common law and civilian legal systems with...
Introduction: Throughout the web of the English Criminal Law one golden thread is always to be seen,...
The issue of the implications which pre-trial police or prosecutorial improprieties should have for ...