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Full-Text Articles in Law
Unplugged - When Do Supreme Court Justices Need To Just Sit Down And Be Quiet?, Sonja R. West
Unplugged - When Do Supreme Court Justices Need To Just Sit Down And Be Quiet?, Sonja R. West
Popular Media
This article looks at Supreme Court justices providing their opinions on various legal topics prior to resigning from the bench.
The Arrest Of Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Donald E. Wilkes Jr.
The Arrest Of Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Donald E. Wilkes Jr.
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Police forces tend to be among the most secretive and least accountable of all organizations. When pressed for accountability or sued for malfeasance, obfuscation and evasiveness are the typical response. The phenomenon is hardly limited to certain countries or societies–the unassailability of police organizations seems to be universal.–Michael H. Fox The serve-and-protect model of police motivation that was drummed into police corps across the country in the aftermath of the response to anti-war demonstrations in the sixties and seventies has been heavily encroached on by the control-and-suppress model.–J. Ackerman The best motto for a police officer is that sticks and …
Throttling Miranda: Right Wing Ideologues Support The Government Against The Individual, Donald E. Wilkes Jr.
Throttling Miranda: Right Wing Ideologues Support The Government Against The Individual, Donald E. Wilkes Jr.
Popular Media
The 1966 Miranda v. Arizona decision is arguably the most important and undeniably the most famous of all U.S. Supreme Court criminal procedure decisions. The noble purpose of this legal landmark is to prevent Americans taken into custody by police on criminal charges from being subjected to improper interrogation practices calculated to compel citizens to incriminate themselves.
Few people realize that since the early 1970s the Supreme Court has been stealthily choking the life out of Miranda. The latest example of this process of slow strangulation occurred a few weeks ago, on June 1, when the Court in Berghuis …
The Stupidest Lawyering Ever, Donald E. Wilkes Jr.
The Stupidest Lawyering Ever, Donald E. Wilkes Jr.
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Last Wednesday and Thursday, June 23 and 24, Georgia death row inmate Troy Davis finally got what he has been seeking for over a decade -- a court hearing allowing him to present newly discovered evidence he is innocent of the murder of off-duty policeman Mark MacPhail. That hearing was a disaster, however, because of the cataclysmic blundering of his own attorneys. As he sat in the federal district courtroom in jail garb and leg irons watching events unfold, Davis must surely have come to the sickening realization that his lawyers were guilty of some of the stupidest lawyering on …
Constitutional Interpretation? There's No App For That., Sonja R. West
Constitutional Interpretation? There's No App For That., Sonja R. West
Popular Media
The confirmation hearings of Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan begin Monday, and court watchers are steeling themselves for another round of the vacuous Q&A that has become the stuff of modern confirmation hearings.
What she will likely talk about—if she's anything like other recent nominees—is that, if confirmed, she promises to become Kagan the Robot. She will find 100 different ways to assure us that when deciding cases she will do nothing more than mechanically apply the law to the facts. And this is where Kagan needs to throw away the script. The absence of any dialogue on substantive law …
Indestructible Unalienable Rights, Donald E. Wilkes Jr.
Indestructible Unalienable Rights, Donald E. Wilkes Jr.
Popular Media
Perhaps the sublimest achievement of the Western World is the development of the notion that all human beings have immutable, imperishable basic rights, rights that trump all other interests, rights that cannot be denied or trampled upon except through injustice and barbarity. These rights of individuals include political rights, civil rights, and social rights.
The Unsung Empathy Of Justice Stevens, Sonja R. West, Dahlia Lithwick
The Unsung Empathy Of Justice Stevens, Sonja R. West, Dahlia Lithwick
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Justice John Paul Stevens' announcement of his retirement this morning has his many admirers at a loss: Liberals are already bemoaning the absence of a true liberal leader at the court—a man who could still manage to "count to five" to forge a majority on the sometimes fractious center-left of the court.