Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Indiana (2)
- 18 U.S.C. § 249 (1)
- 2013 (1)
- All other merchant wholesalers (1)
- All other sporting goods stores (1)
-
- Amish (1)
- Amish -- Legal status and laws etc. (1)
- Atrocities (1)
- Causation (Criminal law) -- Standards (1)
- Compensatory damages (1)
- Crime analysis (1)
- Crimes against humanity -- Lawsuits & claims (1)
- Criminal law -- Cases (1)
- Criminal law -- Interpretation & construction (1)
- Criminal record (1)
- D.C. (1)
- Damages (Law) -- United States (1)
- Domestic courts & international law (1)
- Etc. (1)
- Expunged convictions (1)
- Expungement Law (1)
- Extraordinary Violence (1)
- Firearms -- Government policy (1)
- Firearms -- Law & legislation (1)
- Genocide -- Lawsuits & claims (1)
- HCPA (1)
- Hate crime analysis (1)
- Hate crimes (1)
- Hate crimes -- United States -- Religious aspects (1)
- IND. R. EVID. 609(a) (1)
Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
Method Of Attack: A Supplemental Model For Hate Crime Analysis, Angela D. Moore
Method Of Attack: A Supplemental Model For Hate Crime Analysis, Angela D. Moore
Indiana Law Journal
On October 28, 2009, the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act (HCPA) was signed into law by President Barack Obama. Two years later, between September and November of 2011, members of a Bergholz, Ohio, Amish community allegedly carried out five attacks in which they forcibly restrained, and cut the hair and beards of, members of other Amish communities. In September of 2012, a jury rendered a verdict in United States v. Mullet and found sixteen members of the Bergholz community—including Samuel Mullet, bishop of the community—guilty of HCPA violations. These were the first convictions for religion-based …
I Did My Time: The Transformation Of Indiana’S Expungement Law, Joseph C. Dugan
I Did My Time: The Transformation Of Indiana’S Expungement Law, Joseph C. Dugan
Indiana Law Journal
This Note evaluates the transformation of Indiana’s expungement law. Part I addresses the socioeconomic impacts of a criminal record. Part II presents normative arguments both for and against expungement, concluding that the balance tips in favor of forgiveness. Parts III–IV discuss Indiana’s original expungement provisions, the 2013 statute, and the 2014 amendments. Part V explores the reaction to the new law. Finally, Part VI offers recommendations to improve the statute so that its second-chance promise is equitable, accessible, and robust.
Can Judges Make Reliable Numeric Judgments? Distorted Damages And Skewed Sentences, Jeffrey J. Rachlinski, Andrew J. Wistrich, Chris Guthrie
Can Judges Make Reliable Numeric Judgments? Distorted Damages And Skewed Sentences, Jeffrey J. Rachlinski, Andrew J. Wistrich, Chris Guthrie
Indiana Law Journal
In a series of studies involving over six hundred trial judges in three countries, we demonstrate that trial judges’ civil damage awards and criminal sentences are subject to influences that make them erratic. We found that the presence of misleading numeric reference points (or “anchors”) affected judges’ decisions in a series of hypothetical cases. Specifically, judges imposed shorter sentences when assigning sentences in months rather than in years; awarded higher amounts of compensatory damages when informed of a cap on damage awards; imposed different sentences depending upon the sequence in which criminal cases were presented to them; and were influenced …
Big Fish, Small Ponds: International Crimes In National Courts, Elizabeth B. Ludwin King
Big Fish, Small Ponds: International Crimes In National Courts, Elizabeth B. Ludwin King
Indiana Law Journal
The principle of complementarity in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court anticipates that perpetrators of genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity will be tried in domestic courts unless there is no state with jurisdiction willing or able to do so. This Article examines the situation where a state might be willing to engage in meaningful local justice but temporarily lacks the capability to do so due to the effects of the conflict. It argues that where the state submits a detailed proposal to the International Criminal Court (ICC) outlining the steps necessary to gain or regain the …
Disarming The Dangerous: Preventing Extraordinary And Ordinary Violence, M. Fan
Disarming The Dangerous: Preventing Extraordinary And Ordinary Violence, M. Fan
Indiana Law Journal
Mass shootings at Navy Yard, Newtown, Aurora, and elsewhere have jolted Congress and the states into considering gun violence prevention. More than 1500 gun-related bills have been introduced since 2013, after the slaughter in Newtown of twenty elementary-school children and six adults. Legislation and debates are shaped by the specter of a heavily armed, mentally ill individual hunting in public places such as schools, businesses, and workplaces. In the states, the most successful type of legislation involves firearms restrictions for the mentally ill. In Congress, the legislation that garnered the most debate was a ban on assault weapons and large-capacity …
Are Indiana’S Newly Expunged Convictions Still Available For Impeachment?, Graham Polando
Are Indiana’S Newly Expunged Convictions Still Available For Impeachment?, Graham Polando
Indiana Law Journal
During trial, a litigant can, of course, impeach a witness with certain criminal convictions. However, Indiana Evidence Rule 609(c), like its federal counterpart, prohibits parties from introducing such evidence when “the conviction has been the subject of a pardon, annulment, certificate of rehabilitation, or other equivalent procedure based on a finding that the person has been rehabilitated . . . .” Indiana, however, has no procedure for annulment or certificates of rehabilitation—and, until recently, had nothing resembling one.
To some fanfare, the General Assembly has recently enacted an expungement provision. As courts begin to grant these expungements, it is only …