Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

PDF

Remedies

Journal

Northern Illinois University

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Article I Courts, Substantive Rights, And Remedies For Government Misconduct, David A. Case Nov 2005

Article I Courts, Substantive Rights, And Remedies For Government Misconduct, David A. Case

Northern Illinois University Law Review

This article argues that Article I courts can use equitable principles to provide individuals who have been victimized by corrupt behavior of government attorneys with a remedy. Article III courts have struggled to define the powers of Article I courts in a way that does not do violence to the petition clause, the appropriations clause, or the takings clause, sometimes concluding that petitioners were entitled to no relief when the government had violated some right of the petitioners. After tracing the development of claims against the government in general, and in the extant Article I courts, the article employs Professors …


Protection Of Farmers In Grain Elevator Bankruptcies, Justin E. Bauer, D.L. Uchtmann May 1986

Protection Of Farmers In Grain Elevator Bankruptcies, Justin E. Bauer, D.L. Uchtmann

Northern Illinois University Law Review

The authors discuss the problem of legal protection of the farmer-producer in the event of a grain elevator insolvency. The article focuses upon recent federal and state legislative responses to this escalating legal and political dilemma.


The Precarious Constitutionality Of Rico Civil Remedies, Edward J. Rodgers Iii May 1982

The Precarious Constitutionality Of Rico Civil Remedies, Edward J. Rodgers Iii

Northern Illinois University Law Review

This Comment will analyze the differences between civil, quasi-criminal and criminal cases, and demonstrate that RICO civil remedies are civil (regulatory-compensatory) in nature, rather than criminal (penal), or quasi-criminal. In making this determination, this Comment will examine the legislative history of RICO and its relationship to antitrust precedent, and apply to RICO the tests currently used by the United States Supreme Court to determine borderlines between civil, quasi-criminal and criminal laws.