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University of Washington School of Law

1990

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Advocacy And Contempt—Part Two: Charting The Boundaries Of Contempt: Ensuring Adequate Breathing Room For Advocacy, Louis S. Raveson Oct 1990

Advocacy And Contempt—Part Two: Charting The Boundaries Of Contempt: Ensuring Adequate Breathing Room For Advocacy, Louis S. Raveson

Washington Law Review

Professor Raveson previously argued that the Constitution limits the contempt power to the punishment of actual obstructions of the administration of justice. In this Article, he maintains that any standard for defining contempt that is less restrictive than actual obstruction or the imminent threat of obstruction would be unconstitutionally overbroad. In addition, Professor Raveson discusses the inevitable imprecision that inheres even in the actual obstruction standard for contempt. He explains that the appropriate division between permissible advocacy and contempt must reflect a balance between the frequently conflicting goals of a trial in order to maximize the value of these interests …