Search results for: "sent" (2118 results)
all charges, convictions, and sentences obtained subsequent to racist policing. Like the Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule, the super-exclusionary rule
Not every sentence demands an introductory clause reminding us what we just read in the previous sentence. We don’t want to expunge split infinitives
sentence demands an introductory clause reminding us what we just read in the previous sentence. We don’t want to expunge split infinitives and
9; cf. id. at 22 (“[A] model [of law] should . . . describe an arc of actions, movements, words, and sentiments, none of which is likely to be
determination made with no input from or consultation with the detainee allows him to be tried by military commission, where he may be sentenced to life
character-related motive analysis in criminal sentencing). See David Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature (Oxford, Clarendon Press 1888); J.L. Mackie, The
Alabama, 567 U.S. 460, 471 (2012) (“Children are constitutionally different from adults for purposes of sentencing.”); see also infra note 137 (discussing
petitioners have served their sentences, and they and their community suffer continuing prejudice from the conviction. The Korematsu, Hirabayashi, and
climate of tension, anger, and fear in some communities; similar sentiments are also present among many in law enforcement. The topic of policing in
study of prosecutors’ archives or careful comparisons of the sentences that followed after plea deals or trials for similarly situated defendants would