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Full-Text Articles in Law
The Myth Of Preliminary Due Process For Misdemeanor Prosecutions In New York, Anjali Pathmanathan
The Myth Of Preliminary Due Process For Misdemeanor Prosecutions In New York, Anjali Pathmanathan
Faculty Publications
The existing criminal procedure laws of New York do not afford the misdemeanor accused any meaningful preliminary opportunity to fight the substantiation of the accusations against them. This is problematic given that a criminal prosecution can have extreme consequences on an individual’s life, including the loss of liberty, employment, housing, child custody or freedom from immigration removal proceedings. This article therefore analyzes the weaknesses in the existing criminal procedure laws for these prosecutions, and assesses how historical protections dissolved into the myth of preliminary due process for misdemeanor cases today. Ultimately, since the current procedures are ineffective in protecting against …
Preempting Justice: “Precrime” In Fiction And In Fact, Mark C. Niles
Preempting Justice: “Precrime” In Fiction And In Fact, Mark C. Niles
Faculty Publications
(Excerpt)
In the opening scene of Steven Spielberg’s 2002 film adaptation of Philip K. Dick’s short story The Minority Report, we see stylistically edited, disjointed images that appear to depict a man murdering two lovers. It is soon made clear that the images are the video representations of precognitive predictions of a future crime that were made by members of a futuristic crime prevention agency.
Later in the film, we see the same man, at home with his wife—the woman he is shown murdering in the earlier images—and it becomes clear that we are watching the last few moments …