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Getting Out of Traffic: Applying White Collar Investigative Tactics to Increase Detection of Sex Trafficking Cases Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-05-14 Evan Binder
When federal authorities investigate sex trafficking, three realities are consistently present. First, most sex trafficking investigations begin in response to an individual affirmatively bringing evidence to investigators. Second, the elements required to prove a someone guilty of sex trafficking under federal sex trafficking laws incentivize prosecutors to rely on victim testimony and their cooperation
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Paying For a Clean Record Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-05-14 Amy F. Kimpel
Prosecutors and courts often charge a premium for the ability to avoid or erase a criminal conviction. Defendants with means, who tend to be predominantly White, can often pay for a clean record. But the indigent who are unable to pay, and are disproportionately Black and Brown, are saddled with the stigma of a criminal record. Diversion and expungement are two popular reforms that were promulgated
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Is Juvenile Probation Obsolete? Reexamining and Reimagining Youth Probation Law, Policy, and Practice Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-05-14 Patricia Soung
The dramatic growth of prison populations in the United States during the latter half of the twentieth century, as well as the problems of over-policing and police misconduct, have been well documented and decried. But the related expansion and problems of community supervision receive far less attention. Across the nation, reform efforts have increasingly included a focus on probation, especially
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Judicial Responses to Age and Other Mitigation Evidence: An Exploratory Case Study of Juvenile Life Sentences in Pre-Miller Cases Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-05-14 José B. Ashford, Katherine Puzauskas, Robert J. Dormady
This study describes how judges in Maricopa County, Arizona responded to age and other mitigation evidence in imposing “life” versus “natural life” sentences for juvenile offenders convicted of homicide in pre-Miller cases. Maricopa County was selected for this case study because of its history of adhering to “restrictive interpretations” of various kinds of mitigation evidence and because of the characteristics
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Rethinking Prison for Non-Violent Gun Possession Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-05-14 Robert Weiss
Whatever the wisdom or folly of the belief, Americans who live in violence-affected neighborhoods often believe they need a gun for self-defense. Yet many are, due to age or criminal record, unable to legally possess a firearm. The result is a Catch-22 they describe as either being “caught with a gun . . . [or] dead without one.” Indeed, Chicago, Philadelphia, and other cities imprison thousands of
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How Culture Impacts Courtrooms: An Empirical Study of Alienation and Detachment in the Cook County Court System Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-03-26 Maria Hawilo, Kat Albrecht, Meredith Martin Rountree, Thomas Geraghty
Courtrooms operate as unique microcosms—inhabited by courtroom personnel, legal actors, defendants, witnesses, family members, and community residents who necessarily interact with each other to conduct the day-to-day functions of justice. This Article argues that these interactions create a nuanced and salient courtroom culture that separates courtroom insiders from courtroom outsiders. The authors
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Risk-Based Sentencing and the Principles of Punishment Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-03-26 Christopher Lewis
Risk-based sentencing regimes use an offender’s statistical likelihood of returning to crime in the future to determine the amount of time he or she spends in prison. Many criminal justice reformers see this as a fair and efficient way to shrink the size of the incarcerated population, while minimizing sacrifices to public safety. But risk-based sentencing is indefensible even (and perhaps especially)
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Reconceiving Coercion-Based Criminal Defenses Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-03-26 Stephen R. Galoob, Erin Sheley
Coercing someone is sometimes wrong and sometimes a crime. People subject to coercion are sometimes eligible for criminaldefenses, such as duress. How, exactly, does coercion operate in such contexts? Among legal scholars, the predominant understanding of coercion is the “wrongful pressure” model, which states that coercion exists when the coercer wrongfully threatens the target and, as a result of
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Theorizing Failed Prosecutions Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-03-26 Jon B. Gould, Victoria M. Smiegocki, Richard A. Leo
Over the last twenty years, the scholarly field of erroneous convictions has skyrocketed, with multiple articles and books exploring the failures that convict the innocent. However, there has been comparatively little attention to the other side of the coin, failed prosecutions, when the criminal justice system falls short in convicting the likely perpetrator. In this Article, we take up an analysis
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Protecting the Substantive Due Process Rights of Immigrant Detainees: Using COVID-19 to Create a New Analogy Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-03-26 Liamarie Quinde
While the Supreme Court has defined certain constitutional protections for incarcerated individuals, the Court has never clearly defined the due process rights of immigrant detainees in the United States. Instead, the Supreme Court defers to the due process protections set by Congress when enacting U.S. immigration law. Increasingly, the federal courts defer to Congress and the Executive’s plenary
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Fetal Protection Laws and the "Personhood" Problem: Toward a Relational Theory of Fetal Life and Reproductive Responsibility Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-03-26 Amanda Gvozden
Fetal Protection Laws (FPLs) are laws that define and provide punishments for any number of crimes, including homicide, committed “against a fetus.” Previous literature has suggested that FPLs need to be explicit about who the intended target of this legislation is. Specifically, comments concerned about the use of FPLs against pregnant women in relation to their own pregnancies suggested that states
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Qualified Immunity and Unqualified Assumptions Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-01-23 Teressa E. Ravenell, Riley H. Ross III
Section 1983 gives people the right to sue a government official for violating their constitutional rights. Qualified immunity provides these same officials with an affirmative defense — even if they violated the constitution, they are not liable for monetary damages if the right at issue was not clearly established at the time of the alleged conduct. The qualified immunity is based upon the basic
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Policing Suspicion: Qualified Immunity and "Clearly Established" Standards of Proof Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-01-23 Seth W. Stoughton, Kyle McLean, Justin Nix, Geoffrey Alpert
This Article explores the intersection of Fourth Amendment standards of proof and the “clearly established” prong of qualified immunity. It illustrates how the juxtaposition of the Court’s insistence on a low level of specificity for the development of suspicion and a high degree of specificity for the imposition of liability makes it exceedingly difficult to hold officers accountable for violating
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Prison Medical Deaths and Qualified Immunity Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-01-23 Andrea Craig Armstrong
The defense of qualified immunity for claims seeking monetary damages for constitutionally inadequate medical care for people who are incarcerated is misguided. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, medical illness is the leading cause of death of people incarcerated in prisons and jails across the United States. Qualified immunity in these cases limits accountability for carceral actors, thereby
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Recalibrating Qualified Immunity: How Tanzin v. Tanvir, Taylor v. Riojas, and McCoy v. Alamu Signal the Supreme Court's Discomfort with the Doctrine of Qualified Immunity Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-01-23 Patrick Jaicomo, Anya Bidwell
In December 2020, the United States Supreme Court issued its most important decision on qualified immunity since Harlow v. Fitzgerald, and the issue in the case did not even involve the doctrine. In the Court’s unanimous opinion in Tanzin v. Tanvir, which dealt with the interpretation of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, Justice Thomas explicitly distanced the Court from the very type of policy
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Civil Rights Litigation in the Lower Courts: The Justice Barrett Edition Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2022-01-23 Aaron L. Nielson, Paul Stancil
Now that Justice Amy Coney Barrett has joined the United States Supreme Court, most observers predict the law will shift on many issues. This common view presumably contains at least some truth. The conventional wisdom, however, overlooks something important: the Supreme Court’s ability to shift the law is constrained by the cases presented to it and how they are presented. Lower courts are thus an
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Toward a More Perfect Trial: Amending Federal Rules of Evidence 106 and 803 to Complete the Rule of Completeness Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2021-11-25 Louisa M. A. Heiny, Emily Nuvan
The common law Rule of Completeness was designed to prevent parties from introducing incomplete—and thereby misleading—statements at trial. It ensured fundamental fairness by ensuring that a fact finder heard an entire statement or series of statements if the whole would “complete” the partial evidence presented. It served this important role in Anglo-American jurisprudence for centuries before the
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Constitutional Pandemic Surveillance Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2021-11-25 Matthew B. Kugler, Mariana Oliver
How do people view governmental pandemic surveillance? And how can their views inform courts considering the constitutionality of digital monitoring programs aimed at containing the spread of a highly contagious diseases? We measure the perceived intrusiveness of pandemic surveillance through two nationally representative surveys of Americans. Our results show that even at the height of a pandemic
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Don't (Tower) Dump on Freedom of Association: Protest Surveillance Under the First and Fourth Amendments Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2021-11-25 Ana Pajar Blinder
Government surveillance is ubiquitous in the United States and can range from the seemingly innocuous to intensely intrusive. Recently, the surveillance of protestors—such as those protesting against George Floyd’s murder by a police officer—has received widespread attention in the media and in activist circles, but has yet to be successfully challenged in the courts. Tower dumps, the acquisition of
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Breonna Taylor: Transforming a Hashtag into Defunding the Police Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2021-11-25 Jordan Martin
How can modern policing be reformed to address police violence against Black women when it can occur at no fault of their own and end with a shower of bullets in the middle of the night while within the sanctity of their own home? What is accomplished when her name is said but justice is never achieved? What good does it do when her story is subsequently overshadowed or overlooked by the reform movements
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Capital Felony Merger Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2021-08-18 William W. Berry III
Capital felony murder statutes continue to enable states to sentence criminal defendants to death. These are often individuals who possessed no intent to kill and, in some cases, did not kill. These statutes remain constitutionally dubious under the basic principles of the Eighth Amendment, but the United States Supreme Court’s evolving standards of decency doctrine has proved an ineffective tool to
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Missing the Misjoinder Mark: Improving Criminal Joinder of Offenses in Capital-Sentencing Jurisdictions Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2021-08-18 Milton J. Hernandez, IV
In all state and federal jurisdictions in the United States, joinder allows prosecutors to join multiple offenses against a criminal defendant. Joinder pervades the American criminal justice system, and some jurisdictions see joinder in more than half of their cases. Most states and the federal courts use a liberal joinder system where courts may join offenses regardless of their severity or punishment
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"Defund the (School) Police"? Bringing Data to Key School-to-Prison Pipeline Claims Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2021-08-18 Michael Heise, Jason P. Nance
Nationwide calls to “Defund the Police,” largely attributable to the resurgent Black Lives Matter demonstrations, have motivated derivative calls for public school districts to consider “defunding” (or modifying) school resource officer (“SRO/police”) programs. To be sure, a school’s SRO/police presence—and the size of that presence—may influence the school’s student discipline reporting policies and
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Minding the Gap in Domestic Violence Legislation: Should States Adopt Course of Conduct Laws? Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2021-08-18 Teresa Manring
In the United States, there is a gap between the way that sociologists, psychologists, legal scholars, and advocates define domestic violence and the way that criminal laws define domestic violence. Experts largely agree: domestic violence occurs when a partner exercises continuous power and control over the other. In this view, domestic violence occurs via a pattern of abusive behaviors that unfolds
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Rethinking Reverse Location Search Warrants Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (IF 3.2) Pub Date : 2021-08-18 Mohit Rathi
The conflict between personal liberty and collective security has challenged Americans throughout the ages. The reverse location search warrant, which provides police officers with the ability to access location information on every smartphone that passes within a certain radius around a crime scene, is the newest chapter in this conflict. This technology is relatively new, but it is slowly being adopted