Nov 7 2018 Video Event Videos Criminal Justice Trends and Potential Reform Daniel Cameron, Robert M. Duncan, Andrew G. English, Lou Anna Red Corn, Danny C. Reeves 2018 Kentucky Chapters Conference On October 29, 2018, the Federalist Society's Kentucky lawyers chapters hosted the second annual Kentucky...
Feb 16 2006 Publication Bar Watch Bulletin February 16, 2006 Special: Domestic Survillance Task Force Over the past 72 hours, the American Bar Association has received much press attention for...
Aug 16 2019 Publication Federalist Society Review Two Views on Criminal Justice Reform: The Author and a Critic on Locked In Vikrant P. Reddy, Kent Scheidegger Federalist Society Review, Volume 20 A Debate About: Locked In: The True Causes of Mass Incarceration—and How to Achieve Real...
Jun 27 2016 Topics Federalism & Separation of Powers Blog Post News SCOTUS Opinions and Orders Update Maimon Schwarzschild, Kenneth W. Starr, Timothy Courtney The Supreme Court issued opinions in the 3 remaining argued cases from OT 15, as...
Feb 12 2005 Publication Bar Watch Bulletin February 12, 2005 2005 ABA Midyear Meeting, President Grey remarks, Dialogue Between Congress & the Judiciary Today we report on proceedings from Saturday's ABA Meetings. President Grey offers remarks at the...
Nov 17 2015 Topics Criminal Law & Procedure Blog Post News Point/Counterpoint: Criminal Justice Reform and Mens Rea William H. Pryor, John G. Malcolm My good friend Bill Otis has posted his opening statement from a Federalist Society event...
Aug 9 2023 Topics Administrative Law & Regulation • Criminal Law & Procedure Blog Post News How Much Should Courts Defer to U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Commentary? Peter M. Thomson The federal circuit courts are irreconcilably split on a weighty question: How much deference should...
Mar 4 2024 Publication Federalist Society Review The Myth of Mass Incarceration Remains Strong—Despite All Evidence to the Contrary Zack Smith Federalist Society Review, Volume 25 A review of Jeffrey Bellin, Mass Incarceration Nation: How the United States Became Addicted to...
Apr 24 2020 Publication Federalist Society Review Is Our Modern Administrative State Unmoored from the Morality of Law? Ted Hirt Federalist Society Review, Volume 21 A review of The Dubious Morality of Modern Administrative Law, by Richard A. Epstein (Manhattan Institute...
Feb 1 2000 Publication The Future of Miranda and the Exclusionary Rule Michael O'Neill, Vivian Berger, Bradford A. Berenson, William G. Otis, Tim Lynch Criminal Law & Procedure Practice Group Newsletter - Volume 3, Issue 3, Winter 2000 Following are remarks from a panel discussion sponsored by the Criminal Law & Procedure Practice...
Criminal Justice Trends and Potential Reform
Daniel Cameron, Robert M. Duncan, Andrew G. English, Lou Anna Red Corn, Danny C. Reeves
2018 Kentucky Chapters Conference
On October 29, 2018, the Federalist Society's Kentucky lawyers chapters hosted the second annual Kentucky...
Bar Watch Bulletin February 16, 2006
Special: Domestic Survillance Task Force
Over the past 72 hours, the American Bar Association has received much press attention for...
Two Views on Criminal Justice Reform: The Author and a Critic on Locked In
Vikrant P. Reddy, Kent Scheidegger
Federalist Society Review, Volume 20
A Debate About: Locked In: The True Causes of Mass Incarceration—and How to Achieve Real...
Topics
SCOTUS Opinions and Orders Update
The Supreme Court issued opinions in the 3 remaining argued cases from OT 15, as...
Bar Watch Bulletin February 12, 2005
2005 ABA Midyear Meeting, President Grey remarks, Dialogue Between Congress & the Judiciary
Today we report on proceedings from Saturday's ABA Meetings. President Grey offers remarks at the...
Topics
Point/Counterpoint: Criminal Justice Reform and Mens Rea
My good friend Bill Otis has posted his opening statement from a Federalist Society event...
Topics
How Much Should Courts Defer to U.S. Sentencing Guidelines Commentary?
The federal circuit courts are irreconcilably split on a weighty question: How much deference should...
The Myth of Mass Incarceration Remains Strong—Despite All Evidence to the Contrary
Zack Smith
Federalist Society Review, Volume 25
A review of Jeffrey Bellin, Mass Incarceration Nation: How the United States Became Addicted to...
Is Our Modern Administrative State Unmoored from the Morality of Law?
Ted Hirt
Federalist Society Review, Volume 21
A review of The Dubious Morality of Modern Administrative Law, by Richard A. Epstein (Manhattan Institute...
The Future of Miranda and the Exclusionary Rule
Michael O'Neill, Vivian Berger, Bradford A. Berenson, William G. Otis, Tim Lynch
Criminal Law & Procedure Practice Group Newsletter - Volume 3, Issue 3, Winter 2000
Following are remarks from a panel discussion sponsored by the Criminal Law & Procedure Practice...