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Articles 1 - 30 of 62
Full-Text Articles in Law
Sexual Abuse Of Male Juveniles In Detention Centers By Female Correction Officers And Their Peers – A Myth?, Paul Cook
Paul Cook
This Comment both reveals the nature and dynamic of sexual abuse in the male juvenile detention centers and dispels common misconceptions we had of it. By comparing and contrasting the BJS male and juvenile incarceration data with previously projected statistics, This Comment subjected these sets of data through statistical formulas. From that, it has made several findings.1) Male juveniles appear to be more frequently abused when detained. 2) Staff are the primary perpetrators. 3) There are both overt and non-overt traits that correlate to higher rates of sexual abuse. 4) White male juveniles have a higher correlation to sexual abuse …
Mental Illness, Police Power Interventions, And The Expressive Functions Of Punishment, Robert F. Schopp
Mental Illness, Police Power Interventions, And The Expressive Functions Of Punishment, Robert F. Schopp
Robert F Schopp
The state exercises coercive force under the police power to protect the public order, security, and justice. When individuals who manifest significant psychological impairment harm or endanger others, police power interventions can involve several different institutional structures within the criminal justice system or the alternative institution of civil commitment. The analysis presented in this paper draws attention to the significance of the expressive functions of criminal punishment in selecting the most justified institutional structures for police power interventions intended to prevent impaired individuals from harming others. These functions arguably carry important implications for impaired individuals who harm or endanger others, …
Crime, War & Romanticism: Arthur Andersen And The Nature Of Entity Guilt, David N. Cassuto
Crime, War & Romanticism: Arthur Andersen And The Nature Of Entity Guilt, David N. Cassuto
David N Cassuto
In 2002, Arthur Andersen, LLP stood trial for obstruction of justice. The prosecution offered several theories as to who at the firm had committed the crime but no one theory satisfied all twelve jurors. In an attempt to break its deadlock, the jury asked whether it could convict i f some jurors thought Person A at Andersen had done it and some thought it was Person B. Following argument, the judge ruled that it could convict. This article argues that the court's response to the jury's query was wrong as a matter of law and policy. The ruling misconstrues the …
Cyber-Terrorism: Finding A Common Starting Point, Jeffrey T. Biller
Cyber-Terrorism: Finding A Common Starting Point, Jeffrey T. Biller
Jeffrey T Biller
Attacks on computer systems for both criminal and political purposes are on the rise in both the United States and around the world. Foreign terrorist organizations are also developing information technology skills to advance their goals. Looking at the convergence of these two phenomena, many prominent security experts in both government and private industry have rung an alarm bell regarding the potential for acts of cyber-terrorism. However, there is no precise definition of cyber-terrorism under United States law or in practice among cyber-security academicians. The lack of a common starting point is one of the reasons existing law fails to …
New Data And New Questions: Trac's Contribution To Federal Sentencing, Steven Chanenson, Douglas Berman
New Data And New Questions: Trac's Contribution To Federal Sentencing, Steven Chanenson, Douglas Berman
Steven L. Chanenson
No abstract provided.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Is Unconstitutional. Will The Courts Say So After Southern Union V. United States?, William M. Acker Jr.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Is Unconstitutional. Will The Courts Say So After Southern Union V. United States?, William M. Acker Jr.
William M. Acker Jr.
No abstract provided.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Is Unconstitutional. Will The Courts Say So After Southern Union V. United States?, William M. Acker Jr.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Is Unconstitutional. Will The Courts Say So After Southern Union V. United States?, William M. Acker Jr.
William M. Acker Jr.
No abstract provided.
Slow Acid Drips And Evidentiary Nightmares: Smoothing Out The Rough Justice Of Child Pornography Restitution With A Presumed Damages Theory, Mary Margaret Giannini
Slow Acid Drips And Evidentiary Nightmares: Smoothing Out The Rough Justice Of Child Pornography Restitution With A Presumed Damages Theory, Mary Margaret Giannini
Mary Margaret Giannini
Gist In The Mist: What Is The Gist Of The Mail Fraud Statute And Why Should We Care?, C.J. Williams
Gist In The Mist: What Is The Gist Of The Mail Fraud Statute And Why Should We Care?, C.J. Williams
C.J. Williams
This article explores the origin of the accepted truism that each mailing in furtherance of a scheme to defraud constitutes a separate mail fraud offense, finding it is based upon Supreme Court precedent interpreting a prior, and very different version, of the mail fraud statute. The article examines the language of the current mail fraud statute, compares it to other fraud statutes modeled on the mail fraud statute, and concludes each mailing should not be the unit of prosecution under the current language of the statute. The article discusses the problems that arise from considering each mailing in furtherance of …
Police Cell Phone Searches: Where's The Privacy, John O. Hayward
Police Cell Phone Searches: Where's The Privacy, John O. Hayward
John O. Hayward
Legal academicians are in a dither that law enforcement, using the exception of a search incident to a lawful arrest, are conducting warrantless searches of cell phones found on the person of those they take into custody. They regard such searches as violating the arrestees’ expectation of privacy, although courts that have considered the matter, by an overwhelming majority, have found lawful arrest trumps any expectation of privacy. This paper examines the legal precedent for searches incident to a lawful arrest being an exception to the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures, inquires into the expectation of privacy …
The Drones Are Coming! Will The Fourth Amendment Stop The Threat To Our Privacy., Robert Molko
The Drones Are Coming! Will The Fourth Amendment Stop The Threat To Our Privacy., Robert Molko
Robert Molko
The Drones are coming!
Will the Fourth Amendment Stop their Threat to our Privacy?
Local police have begun to use drones and are planning to expand their use of to survey communities for criminal activity.
On February 14, 2012, President Obama signed the “FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012″ into law; it requires the FAA to expedite the process to authorize both public and private use of drones in the national navigable airspace.
The Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution protects our privacy from unreasonable intrusions by the government and we have come to depend on that.
Today, in …
Torture Warrants, Necessity, And Self-Defense, Fritz Allhoff
Torture Warrants, Necessity, And Self-Defense, Fritz Allhoff
Fritz Allhoff
This article explores a debate over the legal mechanisms by which interrogational torture could be sanctioned. Four separate proposals are considered, including: civil disobedience; torture warrants; self-defense; and necessity. Civil disobedience does not allow for legalized torture, but may allow for reduced punishments. Torture warrants contrast with self-defense and necessity in terms of offering ex ante, as opposed to ex post, authorization; arguments for and against either approach are considered. While there has been some legal scholarship in relation to torture warrants, less has been said about ex post justifications. This article ultimately defends the appropriateness of the necessity defense …
Empirical Objections To Torture: A Critical Reply, Fritz Allhoff
Empirical Objections To Torture: A Critical Reply, Fritz Allhoff
Fritz Allhoff
Those who support torture in ticking-time-bomb cases are often criticized as failing to consider empirical objections to torture; however, torture’s critics often wield this charge uncritically, doing little more than throwing out platitudes without considering the role of those platitudes in the dialectic. I agree with the critics that more empirical engagement is owed than is typically on offer, but deny that such engagement vindicates their position. This essay therefore considers various stock objections to the actual use of torture, while ultimately arguing that those objections fail to undermine the use of torture in exceptional cases. In particular, we will …
Criminal Forfeiture Procedure In 2012: An Annual Survey Of Developments In The Case Law, Stefan D. Cassella
Criminal Forfeiture Procedure In 2012: An Annual Survey Of Developments In The Case Law, Stefan D. Cassella
Stefan D Cassella
This is an annual review of the case law regarding asset forfeiture in federal criminal cases. It discusses the permissible scope of a forfeiture order, and then takes the reader through each step in the forfeiture process from seizure and restraint to indictment, trial or plea, sentencing, and the ancillary proceeding which the rights and interests of third parties are resolved.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Is Unconstitutional. Will The Courts Say So After Southern Union V. United States?, William M. Acker Jr.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Is Unconstitutional. Will The Courts Say So After Southern Union V. United States?, William M. Acker Jr.
William M. Acker Jr.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act is Unconstitutional. See United States v. Southern Union.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Is Unconstitutional. Will The Courts Say So After Southern Union V. United States?, William M. Acker Jr.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Is Unconstitutional. Will The Courts Say So After Southern Union V. United States?, William M. Acker Jr.
William M. Acker Jr.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act is Unconstitutional. See Southern Union v. United States.
United States V. Jones: Big Brother And The “Common Good” Versus The Fourth Amendment And Your Right To Privacy, Melanie M. Reid
United States V. Jones: Big Brother And The “Common Good” Versus The Fourth Amendment And Your Right To Privacy, Melanie M. Reid
Melanie M. Reid
This Article traces the evolution of Fourth Amendment law and what constitutes a “search” from English property law and trespass to the reasonable expectation of privacy under United States v. Katz to the latest Supreme Court decision in United States v. Jones. The Supreme Court’s recent reliance upon historical property law in Jones impacts law enforcement’s ability to use tracking devices, especially when exigent circumstances exist. The Jones decision may also subsequently impact law enforcement’s use of other investigatory tools, such as trash pulls, stationary cameras, open fields, and undercover agent or informant non-consensual recordings. The decision in Jones brings …
Reforming Surveillance Law: The Swiss Model, Susan Freiwald, Sylvain Metille
Reforming Surveillance Law: The Swiss Model, Susan Freiwald, Sylvain Metille
Susan Freiwald
Reforming Surveillance Law: The Swiss Model
Susan Freiwald & Sylvain Métille
As implemented over the past twenty-six years, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA), which regulates electronic surveillance by law enforcement agents, has become incomplete, confusing, and ineffective. In contrast, a new Swiss law (CrimPC) regulates law enforcement surveillance in a more comprehensive, uniform, and effective manner. This article compares the two approaches and argues that recent proposals to reform EPCA in a piecemeal fashion will not suffice. Instead, the Swiss CrimPC law presents a model for more fundamental reform of U.S. law.
This article is the first to analyze …
Bringing Down A Legend: How Pennsylvania’S Investigating Grand Jury Ended Joe Paterno’S Career, Brian Gallini
Bringing Down A Legend: How Pennsylvania’S Investigating Grand Jury Ended Joe Paterno’S Career, Brian Gallini
Brian Gallini
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Is Unconstitutional. Will The Courts Say So After Southern Union V. United States?, William M. Acker Jr.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act Is Unconstitutional. Will The Courts Say So After Southern Union V. United States?, William M. Acker Jr.
William M. Acker Jr.
The Mandatory Victims Restitution Act is Unconstitutional. See Southern Union v. United States.
Harmelin's Faulty Originalism, Michael J.Z. Mannheimer
Harmelin's Faulty Originalism, Michael J.Z. Mannheimer
Michael J.Z. Mannheimer
In Harmelin v. Michigan, in 1991, Justice Scalia, writing only for himself and Chief Justice Rehnquist, set forth the claim that the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause, as understood in 1791, did not require proportionality in sentencing. Instead, he argued, it was understood at that time as addressing only certain methods of punishment. Twenty-one years later, the plurality opinion in Harmelin remains the foundation for conservative originalist arguments against the notion that the Clause forbids disproportionate punishment. It has continued to be cited by its adherents, Justices Scalia and Thomas, as recently as the last week of the October 2011 …
Drugs, Dignity And Danger: Human Dignity As A Constitutional Constraint To Limit Overcriminalization, Michal Buchhandler-Raphael
Drugs, Dignity And Danger: Human Dignity As A Constitutional Constraint To Limit Overcriminalization, Michal Buchhandler-Raphael
Michal Buchhandler-Raphael
The American criminal justice system is under tremendous pressures, increasingly collapsing under its heavy weight, thus requiring inevitable change. One notable feature responsible for this broken system is over-criminalization: the scope of criminal law is constantly expanding, making individuals liable to conviction and punishment for an ever-wider range of behaviors. One area where over-criminalization is most notable concerns victimless crimes, namely, individuals who engage in consensual conducts which inflict only harm on themselves but not on third parties, such as prostitution, pornography, sadomasochism, gambling, and most notably, drug crimes.
Despite increasing scholarly critique of the continued criminalization of these behaviors, …
Drugs, Dignity And Danger: Human Dignity As A Constitutional Constraint To Limit Overcriminalization, Michal Buchhandler-Raphael
Drugs, Dignity And Danger: Human Dignity As A Constitutional Constraint To Limit Overcriminalization, Michal Buchhandler-Raphael
Michal Buchhandler-Raphael
The American criminal justice system is under tremendous pressures, increasingly collapsing under its heavy weight, thus requiring inevitable change. One notable feature responsible for this broken system is over-criminalization: the scope of criminal law is constantly expanding, making individuals liable to conviction and punishment for an ever-wider range of behaviors. One area where over-criminalization is most notable concerns victimless crimes, namely, individuals who engage in consensual conducts which inflict only harm on themselves but not on third parties, such as prostitution, pornography, sadomasochism, gambling, and most notably, drug crimes.
Despite increasing scholarly critique of the continued criminalization of these behaviors, …
Aedpa's Wrecks: Comity, Finality, And Federalism, Lee B. Kovarsky
Aedpa's Wrecks: Comity, Finality, And Federalism, Lee B. Kovarsky
Lee Kovarsky
Over the last decade, federal courts have internalized the idea that interpretations of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) should disfavor habeas relief. This Article explores the strange legislative history surrounding AEDPA's passage and the resulting problems in using 'comity, finality, and federalism' to express this interpretive mood. It demonstrates that such a simplistic reading of habeas reform is deeply misguided. Through the use of public choice and related models, the Article explores the roots of this interpretive problem. It ultimately rejects any attempt to characterize AEDPA by reference to legislative purpose.
Reclaiming Equality To Reframe Indigent Defense Reform, Lauren Sudeall Lucas
Reclaiming Equality To Reframe Indigent Defense Reform, Lauren Sudeall Lucas
Lauren Sudeall Lucas
Equal access to resources is fundamental to meaningful legal representation, yet for decades, equality arguments have been ignored in litigating indigent defense reform. At a time when underfunded indigent defense systems across the country are failing to provide indigent defendants with adequate representation, the question of resources is even more critical. Traditionally, advocates seeking indigent defense reform have relied on Sixth Amendment arguments to protect the rights of indigents in this context; however, the Sixth Amendment approach suffers from a number of shortcomings that have made it a poor tool for systemic reform, including its exclusive focus on attorney performance …
Preventing Sex-Offender Recidivism Through Therapeutic Jurisprudence Approaches And Specialized Community Integration, Michael L. Perlin
Preventing Sex-Offender Recidivism Through Therapeutic Jurisprudence Approaches And Specialized Community Integration, Michael L. Perlin
Michael L Perlin
Preventing Sex-Offender Recidivism Through Therapeutic Jurisprudence Approaches and Specialized Community Integration
Abstract
The public’s panic about the fear of recidivism if adjudicated sex offenders are ever to be released to the community has not subsided, despite the growing amount of information and statistically-reliable data signifying a generally low risk of re-offense. The established case law upholding sex offender civil commitment and containment statutes has rejected challenges of unconstitutionality, and continues to be dominated by punitive undertones. We have come to learn that the tools used to assess offenders for risk and civil commitment still have indeterminate accuracy, and that the …
Sexual Abuse Of Male Juveniles In Detention Centers By Female Correction Officers And Their Peers – An Empirical Study, Paul Cook
Paul Cook
This Comment both reveals the nature and dynamic of sexual abuse in the male juvenile detention centers and dispels common misconceptions we had of it. By comparing and contrasting the BJS male and juvenile incarceration data with previously projected statistics, This Comment subjected these sets of data through statistical formulas. From that, it has made several findings.1) Male juveniles appear to be more frequently abused when detained. 2) Staff are the primary perpetrators. 3) There are both overt and non-overt traits that correlate to higher rates of sexual abuse. 4) White male juveniles have a higher correlation to sexual abuse …
Notoriously Lousy: Applying The Strickland Test When Defense Counsel Fails To Seek To Avoid The Imposition Of Collateral Consequences, Alfredo Vasquez
Notoriously Lousy: Applying The Strickland Test When Defense Counsel Fails To Seek To Avoid The Imposition Of Collateral Consequences, Alfredo Vasquez
Alfredo Vasquez
From the 1970s through the early 2000s, plea bargains resolved the vast majority of criminal cases in the United States. While the number of guilty pleas has been consistently high, the number of collateral consequences flowing from criminal convictions has increased. The Supreme Court imposed some regulation on guilty pleas during the last part of the 1960s but it was not until its decision in Padilla v. Kentucky in 2010 that the Court began regulating defense counsel’s duties towards his client during plea negotiations. The Court so far has limited its rulings to immigration consequences in Padilla, and the attorney-client …
The Model Penal Code’S Wrong Turn: Renunciation As A Defense To Criminal Conspiracy, R. Michael Cassidy
The Model Penal Code’S Wrong Turn: Renunciation As A Defense To Criminal Conspiracy, R. Michael Cassidy
R. Michael Cassidy
While the Model Penal Code was certainly one the most influential developments in criminal law in the past century, the American Law Institute (ALI) took a seriously wrong turn by recognizing a defense of “renunciation” to the crime of conspiracy. Under the Model Penal Code formulation, a member of a conspiracy who later disavows the agreement and thwarts its objective (for example, by notifying authorities of the planned crime in order to prevent its completion) is afforded a complete defense to conspiracy liability. This defense has enormous implications for crimes involving national security and terrorism, which are typically planned covertly …
Requiring Dangerousness: An Idea Whose Time Has Come (Again), Steven R. Morrison
Requiring Dangerousness: An Idea Whose Time Has Come (Again), Steven R. Morrison
Steven R Morrison
It is overwhelmingly assumed that criminal conspiracies pose a “distinct evil,” which justifies criminalizing them and providing prosecution-friendly rules of evidence in their proof. Professor Neal Kumar Katyal’s excellent defense of conspiracy law rests on this assumption, but Professor Abraham S. Goldstein’s seminal critique notes that it has never been empirically shown to be true. This Article rejects the distinct evil assumption by showing how Katyal’s and Goldstein’s respective frames lead to their divergent conclusions. It argues that to satisfy both commentators’ legitimate concerns, conspiracies must be shown to be dangerous before criminal liability can attach. This requirement was included …