Aaron Hernandez |
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
The Downside of Being a Celebrity Prisoner: Protective Custody and its Relation to Solitary Confinement
Friday, July 19, 2013
No Money? No Freedom

Wednesday, July 17, 2013
UDC School of Law Professor Andrew Ferguson Weighs in on the Role of Juries and Their Verdicts
On
Saturday, July 13, 2013, the jury in the State of Florida v. George Zimmerman
returned a verdict of not guilty for second-degree murder and manslaughter for
the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin. After the jury returned the
verdict, an expected flurry of news and social media erupted, some in
support of the verdict and many others criticizing
it. Given the contentious issues surrounding the case, a vast amount
of media attention has honed into the jury and what occurred during the jury's deliberation.
One can hope that the jury deliberation of the Zimmerman trial was similar
to the one that took place in the famous stage play and movie, Twelve
Angry Men, where the jurors carefully examined all the evidence in their quest
for the truth and banished personal prejudices from their
deliberation. On the other hand, many fear that racial biases
may have affected the deliberation of the Zimmerman jury that was made up of
five Caucasian women and one Hispanic woman. Whether the deliberation
was similar to that of Twelve Angry Men or corrupted by racial bias,
many questions remain.
In
his article, "The Zimmerman Trial and the Meaning of Verdicts,"
Professor Andrew Ferguson of the University of the District of
Columbia, discusses the Zimmerman jury, the (at the time
undelivered) verdict, as well as juries and their verdicts in general.
Friday, July 12, 2013
Due Process in the Context of Jones-Farmer Hearings: Implications of Kaley v. United States
On
March 18, 2013, the United State Supreme Court granted certiorari in Kaley v. United States. Docket No. 12-464. The case represents a complicated but narrow
legal issue regarding the scope of a defendant’s right to challenge an order
seizing property that the government claims is subject to forfeiture when the
defendant asserts that the property is necessary to pay legal fees. Typically, these seizure orders come during
an ex-parte hearing where the government needs to show property is subject to
forfeiture based on probable cause.
Those assets are then frozen until the conclusion of an underlying
criminal proceeding. The Federal Circuits
permit defendants to challenge the traceability of those assets in
post-indictment, pretrial Jones-Farmer
hearings. The Circuits are split,
though, as to whether a defendant may challenge the evidentiary support and
legal theory of the underlying charges or only the traceability of the property
the government claims is subject to forfeiture.
Sunday, July 7, 2013
We Live in This Society, Lets at Least Be Real About It
In 2009, North Carolina enacted the Racial Justice Act (RJA) in an effort to combat implicit racial bias through the use of several possible measures, most significantly, statistical evidence. Later in 2012, the legislature amended the Act aiming to address what appeared to be only explicit bias, in contrast to its original purpose. Under the RJA, courts were permitted to commute the sentences of death row inmates to life in prison without the possibility of parole, upon a showing of racial discrimination.[1]
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)