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Full-Text Articles in Law
New Procedures Will Aid Accurate Eyewitnes Identification, Lisa Bruiniers, Craig Ching, Mark Goossens, Dan Taylor
New Procedures Will Aid Accurate Eyewitnes Identification, Lisa Bruiniers, Craig Ching, Mark Goossens, Dan Taylor
Student Publications
No abstract provided.
Police Departments Should Record Custodial Interrogations, Robert K. Calhoun, Susan Rutberg
Police Departments Should Record Custodial Interrogations, Robert K. Calhoun, Susan Rutberg
Publications
No abstract provided.
Trends In The Murder Of Juveniles: 1980-2000, Us Department Of Justice
Trends In The Murder Of Juveniles: 1980-2000, Us Department Of Justice
Juvenile Justice Bulletin
No abstract provided.
Successful Program Implementation: Lessons From Blueprints, Us Department Of Justice
Successful Program Implementation: Lessons From Blueprints, Us Department Of Justice
Juvenile Justice Bulletin
No abstract provided.
Prostitution Of Juveniles: Patterns From Nibrs, Us Department Of Justice
Prostitution Of Juveniles: Patterns From Nibrs, Us Department Of Justice
Juvenile Justice Bulletin
No abstract provided.
Detection And Prevalence Of Substance Use Among Juvenile Detainees, Us Department Of Justice
Detection And Prevalence Of Substance Use Among Juvenile Detainees, Us Department Of Justice
Juvenile Justice Bulletin
No abstract provided.
Advising The Pro Se Defendant: The Trial Court's Duties Under Faretta, Myron Moskovitz
Advising The Pro Se Defendant: The Trial Court's Duties Under Faretta, Myron Moskovitz
Publications
In Faretta v. California, the United States Supreme Court held that a defendant in a criminal trial has a constitutional right to represent himself-to act "pro se." "The Sixth Amendment does not provide merely that a defense shall be made for the accused; it grants to the accused personally the right to make his defense.
If a defendant chooses to represent himself, what, if anything, must the trial court do to assist him? Must the trial court advise him of his right to exercise peremptory challenges? To make evidentiary objections? To cross-examine prosecution witnesses? To subpoena his own witnesses? To …