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Full-Text Articles in Law

Due Process And The Harsher Penalty After Appeal-An Unwarranted Extension Of Pearce Jan 1971

Due Process And The Harsher Penalty After Appeal-An Unwarranted Extension Of Pearce

University of Richmond Law Review

At common law there was no "right" to an appeal. Such a "right" could only be established by legislative enactment. The statutes creating a right to an appeal brought with them the problems of determining the constitutional protections that must be afforded this right. Much controversy has centered around one such problem, that of the constitutionality of imposing a more stringent sentence on a defendant after he has successfully appealed and attained a new trial.


The Role Of Eyewitness Accounts In Establishing Probable Cause For The Issuance Of Search Warrants Jan 1971

The Role Of Eyewitness Accounts In Establishing Probable Cause For The Issuance Of Search Warrants

University of Richmond Law Review

The legality of entry gained through the use of a search warrant is dependent upon the legality of the means used to obtain the warrant. To justify the issuance of a search warrant the affiant must show the existence of probable cause.


Right To Counsel In Virginia Jan 1971

Right To Counsel In Virginia

University of Richmond Law Review

The sixth amendment guarantees to an accused the right to assistance of counsel, and this right is extended to state prosecutions through the Due Process clause of the fourteenth amendment. The Supreme Court has interpreted this right to include steps in the proceeding before the trial itself has commenced. In United States v. Wade and Gilbert v. California the Court held post-indictment confrontations for identification purposes to be "critical stages" of the proceedings at which the accused is entitled to the presence of counsel.' Although in both cases the confrontations took place after indictment, the Court indicated that any pretrial …


The Innkeeper's Lien And Due Process Jan 1971

The Innkeeper's Lien And Due Process

University of Richmond Law Review

The problems associated with human mobility require constant testing and refining of the principles embodied in our common and statutory law. Furthermore, there has developed an increasing concern for the rights of the economically disadvantaged individual in contemporary America. The compound problems of the mobile poor have been partly resolved by the application of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to them.