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Texas V. Cobb: A Narrow Road Ahead For The Sixth Amendment Right To Counsel, Beth G. Hungate-Noland
Texas V. Cobb: A Narrow Road Ahead For The Sixth Amendment Right To Counsel, Beth G. Hungate-Noland
University of Richmond Law Review
Raymond Cobb stabbed sixteen-month-old Kori Rae Owings's mother in the stomach while he was attempting to steal the stereo from their home. He then took the mother's body into the woods behind the house.
Double Jeopardy And The Virginia Supreme Court: Three Approaches To Multiple Punishment, Jane S. Glenn
Double Jeopardy And The Virginia Supreme Court: Three Approaches To Multiple Punishment, Jane S. Glenn
University of Richmond Law Review
The double jeopardy clause of the fifth amendment of the United States Constitution affords three primary protections. First, the clause protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after acquittal. Secondly, it protects against a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction. Thirdly, the clause prohibits the imposition of multiple punishment for a single offense. Although the double jeopardy principle has roots in antiquity, it may be one of our least understood constitutional protections. This comment will focus on the third protection of double jeopardy as it has been developed by the United States Supreme Court and recently …