This paper explores criminal appellate practice in Missouri from the time of statehood in 1821 until the 1870s, with particular focus on the decades before and after the Civil War. The article uses the stories of three trials in and around Columbia, Missouri - an attempted rape case against a slave that resulted in a lynching, a murder case against a white farmer that ended in his execution, and another murder case successfully appealed - to explore the legal culture of the period. All three trials involved two prominent central Missouri lawyers, James S. Rollins and Odon Guitar, who were also important political figures in Missouri’s Civil War. The article weaves together the trials, the biographies of Rollins and Guitar, and an exploratio...
This is the second of two articles discussing Missouri’s requisitions to extradite Joseph Smith to f...
Recently I completed a study of all of the felony appeals decided by the Missouri Supreme Court duri...
In Missouri, individuals who have committed a felony offense cannot vote until they have completed t...
This paper explores criminal appellate practice in Missouri from the time of statehood in 1821 until...
Much of the modem American legal process is dependent, not on particular substantive or procedural r...
Much has been written about the vast and violent conflict that was the American Civil War, exploring...
This study focused on local and county courts operated by Missouri’s justices of the peace between t...
Some time before daylight, May 11, 1894, at the foot of Jenkins Hill, about two miles from Browning,...
The three articles offered in this forum on the early history of criminal appeals do us the great se...
This article presents the results of an empirical study of intentional homicide cases in Missouri. T...
Bibliography: pages 365-374.The five years following the Civil War were a critical period in Missour...
Excerpt The past decade has seen a surge in interest in the publication of institutional histories o...
The Mormon war in Missouri began in 1833 when the residents of Jackson County drove out the Mormons ...
304 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2007.This dissertation examines th...
The purpose of this study is to define the right to trial in the county where the crime was committe...
This is the second of two articles discussing Missouri’s requisitions to extradite Joseph Smith to f...
Recently I completed a study of all of the felony appeals decided by the Missouri Supreme Court duri...
In Missouri, individuals who have committed a felony offense cannot vote until they have completed t...
This paper explores criminal appellate practice in Missouri from the time of statehood in 1821 until...
Much of the modem American legal process is dependent, not on particular substantive or procedural r...
Much has been written about the vast and violent conflict that was the American Civil War, exploring...
This study focused on local and county courts operated by Missouri’s justices of the peace between t...
Some time before daylight, May 11, 1894, at the foot of Jenkins Hill, about two miles from Browning,...
The three articles offered in this forum on the early history of criminal appeals do us the great se...
This article presents the results of an empirical study of intentional homicide cases in Missouri. T...
Bibliography: pages 365-374.The five years following the Civil War were a critical period in Missour...
Excerpt The past decade has seen a surge in interest in the publication of institutional histories o...
The Mormon war in Missouri began in 1833 when the residents of Jackson County drove out the Mormons ...
304 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2007.This dissertation examines th...
The purpose of this study is to define the right to trial in the county where the crime was committe...
This is the second of two articles discussing Missouri’s requisitions to extradite Joseph Smith to f...
Recently I completed a study of all of the felony appeals decided by the Missouri Supreme Court duri...
In Missouri, individuals who have committed a felony offense cannot vote until they have completed t...