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Full-Text Articles in Law
Wood V. Georgia, Lewis F. Powell, Jr.
Little V. Streater, Lewis F. Powell, Jr.
Little V. Streater, Lewis F. Powell, Jr.
Supreme Court Case Files
No abstract provided.
Constitutional Law - Due Process Clause - Where New Prosecution Is Initiated For Additional Criminal Activity Not Specified In An Original Indictment, Actual Vindictiveness Is The Proper Standard To Determine Whether Such Prosecutorial Conduct Is Constitutionally Permissible, Peter R. Kahana
Villanova Law Review
No abstract provided.
Constitutional Law - Due Process - Minor Child May Be Voluntarily Committed To Mental Institution By Parents Or Guardian Following Precommitment Approval By A Staff Psychiatrist, Provided That The Child's Condition Is Then Periodically Reviewed, Helene M. Koller
Villanova Law Review
No abstract provided.
Civil Procedure - Quasi In Rem Jurisdiction - Assertion Of Quasi In Rem Jurisdiction Under Rule Of Seider V. Roth Held Violative Of Due Process Clause, Richard Goldstein
Civil Procedure - Quasi In Rem Jurisdiction - Assertion Of Quasi In Rem Jurisdiction Under Rule Of Seider V. Roth Held Violative Of Due Process Clause, Richard Goldstein
Villanova Law Review
No abstract provided.
An Analysis Of The Unwed Father's Adoption Rights In Light Of Caban V. Mohammed: A Foundation In Federal Law For A Necessary Redrafting Of The Pennsylvania Adoption Act, Richard Gutekunst
An Analysis Of The Unwed Father's Adoption Rights In Light Of Caban V. Mohammed: A Foundation In Federal Law For A Necessary Redrafting Of The Pennsylvania Adoption Act, Richard Gutekunst
Villanova Law Review
No abstract provided.
Selective Use Of The Executive Immunity Power: A Denial Of Due Process?, Howard Schwartz
Selective Use Of The Executive Immunity Power: A Denial Of Due Process?, Howard Schwartz
Fordham Urban Law Journal
Attacks on the government's power to grant immunity to cooperative witnesses have been premised on several grounds, including the due process clause of the fifth amendment. It is upon this clause that the United States District Court of the Southern District of New York based a decision that a defendant was denied due process when the government refused to immunize him after granting immunization to its own witnesses. This article examines traditional arguments against challenging a prosecutor's immunity discretion, the procedural and substantive factors necessary in substantiating a defendant's due process claim, and the effect of immunization on the government's …