L. Song Richardson
University of California, Irvine
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Berkeley Journal of International Law | 2008
L. Song Richardson
The adjudication of transnational criminal cases is burdened by a very narrow compulsory process mechanism known as Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties. These treaties regularize foreign evidence gathering for prosecutors and explicitly prevent their use by criminal defendants. The danger of inaccurate verdicts and wrongful convictions that may result from unequal access to evidence highlights the need to resolve this flawed transnational adjudication process, and specifically, its evidentiary method. Building on the works of Neil Komesar, Ronald Coase, and Mancur Nelson, the author utilizes a comparative institutional analysis approach to consider the question of how to obtain parity between the prosecution and the defense in the ability to compel foreign evidence in transnational criminal cases. The issue is of great importance in a post-9/11 world where the fairness and accuracy norms that underpin criminal prosecutions are increasingly ephemeral and illusory. The comparative framework illumes the important considerations for identifying the institution best suited to achieve the norm of parity. Criminal process scholars have not explicitly utilized the comparative institutional analysis framework. This oversight is a mistake. The comparative framework provides an ideal theory to dissect criminal process questions. Explicit institutional comparison, rather than simplistic single institutional considerations, should underlie criminal process scholarship addressing fairness and equity norms.
Archive | 2013
John T. Parry; L. Song Richardson
This document contains the table of contents, notes on contributors, and introduction to The Constitution and the Future of Criminal Justice in America.The chapters in this collection address a wide range of issues relating to criminal justice, from familiar topics such as the continuing problem of race and criminal justice, the right to counsel, and the exclusionary rule, to cutting edge issues relating to the intersection of criminal law with social science and neuroscience, to topics that are often overlooked in collections of this nature: immigration, terrorism, national security and transnational crime. Importantly, the goal of each chapter is not to rehash the past. Instead, each chapter looks forward to consider the future implications of legal doctrine and criminal justice policy.
Archive | 2013
John T. Parry; L. Song Richardson
This document contains the table of contents, notes on contributors, and introduction to The Constitution and the Future of Criminal Justice in America.The chapters in this collection address a wide range of issues relating to criminal justice, from familiar topics such as the continuing problem of race and criminal justice, the right to counsel, and the exclusionary rule, to cutting edge issues relating to the intersection of criminal law with social science and neuroscience, to topics that are often overlooked in collections of this nature: immigration, terrorism, national security and transnational crime. Importantly, the goal of each chapter is not to rehash the past. Instead, each chapter looks forward to consider the future implications of legal doctrine and criminal justice policy.
Archive | 2013
John T. Parry; L. Song Richardson
This document contains the table of contents, notes on contributors, and introduction to The Constitution and the Future of Criminal Justice in America.The chapters in this collection address a wide range of issues relating to criminal justice, from familiar topics such as the continuing problem of race and criminal justice, the right to counsel, and the exclusionary rule, to cutting edge issues relating to the intersection of criminal law with social science and neuroscience, to topics that are often overlooked in collections of this nature: immigration, terrorism, national security and transnational crime. Importantly, the goal of each chapter is not to rehash the past. Instead, each chapter looks forward to consider the future implications of legal doctrine and criminal justice policy.
Iowa Law Review | 2012
L. Song Richardson; Phillip Atiba Goff
Fordham Law Review | 2015
L. Song Richardson
Yale Law Journal | 2013
L. Song Richardson; Phillip Atiba Goff
Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law | 2015
L. Song Richardson; Phillip Atiba Goff
Indiana Law Journal | 2011
L. Song Richardson
Archive | 2010
L. Song Richardson