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Criminal Procedure and Racial Injustice, First Edition

Authors
  • James C. Rehnquist
  • Tracey Maclin
Series / Aspen Casebook Series
Teaching Materials
NO
Description
Table of contents
Preface

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Criminal Procedure and Racial Injustice brings a sustained emphasis on race to the traditional content of criminal procedure. Rather than a wholesale revision of the standard criminal procedure fare, it amply covers all the familiar subject matter areas while integrating into those topics the roles that racial prejudice and racial disparities have played and continue to play in the criminal justice system.

For example, the Investigative volume of the book looks deeply into the role that race—mostly implicitly—played not only in the Court’s written decision of Terry v. Ohio but also in the trial and appellate advocacy that produced that decision, including the direct and cross-examinations in the suppression hearing.

The Adjudicative volume looks closely at the role that race has played in the makeup of juries in criminal trials, including defense counsel’s ability to pursue voir dire questioning of potential jurors to screen for racial bias; the historical use by prosecutors of peremptory challenges to eliminate Black potential jurors, and the attempt to eliminate that practice by the Supreme Court in Batson v. Kentucky; and the perils of cross-race eyewitness identification in criminal trials.

A secondary focus of the book is lawyering—the decisions and tactics of the prosecutors and defense lawyers that undergird the cases in the book. To that end, the plentiful Notes and Questions following the cases provoke thought and discussion not only on the relevant legal doctrine and the racial implications of the doctrine, but also on the choices made by the prosecutors and defense counsel.

Benefits for instructors and students:
  • Flexible organization
  • Interesting, timely cases
  • Sophisticated, robust notes and questions following each case
  • Investigative chapters:
    • Police Interrogation and the Fifth Amendment—the scope of the Fifth Amendment privilege; the backdrop for and decision in Miranda v. Arizona; the implementation of Miranda’s custody; interrogation and waiver/assertion components; and the durability of Miranda
    • The Fourth Amendment—the definitions of search and seizure; the “warrant requirement” and its exceptions; and the landmark case of Terry v. Ohio and its legacies for racial profiling, traffic stops, etc.
    • The Exclusionary Rule—the origins of the rule and its exceptions (good faith, attenuation, standing, etc.) and including a section on suppression hearings
    • The Grand Jury—its purported independence, informality, and secrecy; its virtually unlimited power to subpoena witnesses and documents; and grand jury abuse
    • Addressing Police Misconduct—an unconventional chapter exploring the Supreme Court’s resurrection of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 as a private remedy for civil rights violations, the victims of which are disproportionately members of minority groups; the Court’s subsequent weakening of that remedy through doctrines such as qualified immunity; and the Department of Justice’s administrative remedy to address a “pattern and practice” of police misconduct under 42 U.S.C. § 14141. This subject has become increasingly important in the Criminal Procedure realm as recent Supreme Court decisions rejecting application of the exclusionary rule have sometimes cited § 1983 as an adequate alternative remedy.
  • Adjudicative chapters:
    • The Right to Counsel and Criminal Defense—including claims for ineffective assistance of counsel and the chronic underfunding of public indigent defense
    • The Prosecution Function—the enormous discretion, power and ethical responsibilities of that office
    • Pleas and Plea Bargaining—which account for the resolution of over 95% of criminal cases without a trial or any substantial judicial involvement
    • The Right to a Jury Trial—including a glimpse at the surprising results generated by an “originalist” perspective on the right
    • Eyewitness Identification—the fallibility of which has become even clearer in the era of demonstrably wrongful convictions
    • Incarceration—including a look at bail/pretrial detention and the racially unequal impacts of the death penalty and the legislative crack/cocaine disparity
    • Two unconventional chaptersDiscriminatory Enforcement, which considers, among other things, the high hurdles in making such claims; and The Department of Justice and the Prosecution of Civil Rights Crimes, which broadly examines DOJ enforcement policies from Reconstruction through notable police violence cases of the 21st century   
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Table of Contents
Summary of Contents

 
Contents    
Preface    
Acknowledgments    


CHAPTER I
Introductory Principles    
CHAPTER II
The Roots of Modern Constitutional Criminal Procedure: 
The Supreme Court, Race, and the Post-Bellum South    
CHAPTER III
Police Interrogation and the Fifth Amendment    
CHAPTER IV
The Fourth Amendment    
CHAPTER V
The Exclusionary Rule, Its Exceptions, and Suppression Hearings    
CHAPTER VI
Addressing Police Misconduct    
CHAPTER VII
Grand Jury    
CHAPTER VIII
Right to Counsel and the Defense Function    
CHAPTER IX
The Prosecution Function    
CHAPTER X
The Department of Justice and the Prosecution of Civil Rights Crimes    
CHAPTER XI
Pleas and Plea Bargaining    
CHAPTER XII
Discriminatory Enforcement    
CHAPTER XIII
The Jury I: Scope of the Right and Other Issues    
CHAPTER XIV
Eyewitness Identification    
CHAPTER XV
The Jury II: Race and Juries    
CHAPTER XVI
Incarceration: Bail, Pretrial Detention, and Sentencing    

Table of Cases
Index

 
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About the authors
James C. Rehnquist

Jim Rehnquist is a Visiting Professor of Practice at New England School of Law, where he is currently teaching Evidence and Criminal Defense Ethics. Before that he was a partner at Goodwin Procter, specializing in white collar defense and civil litigation, and a federal prosecutor in Boston.

At Goodwin he hosted a podcast called Sound Bar on various white collar defense topics. He also taught a seminar on Federal Criminal Justice as an adjunct professor at Boston University School of Law.

He is a graduate of Boston University School of law and Amherst College. He clerked on the First Circuit for Hon. Levin Campbell.

Tracey Maclin

Tracey Maclin is Professor of Law and Raymond & Miriam Ehrlich Eminent Scholar Chair. Prior to joining the University of Florida faculty, he was a professor of law and Joseph Lipsitt Faculty Research Scholar at Boston University School of Law. He has also taught at Cornell Law School, Harvard Law School and the University of Kentucky College of Law. Before entering law teaching, Professor Maclin served as a law clerk to Judge Boyce F. Martin, Jr. of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit and worked at Cahill, Gordon & Reindel.

Professor Maclin teaches courses in Constitutional Law, Constitutional Criminal Procedure, and the Fifth Amendment’s Self-Incrimination Clause. He also teaches a seminar on the Supreme Court’s cases in criminal procedure, criminal law, habeas corpus and the death penalty. His scholarship focuses on the Fourth Amendment and the Self-Incrimination Clause of the Fifth Amendment. He has published many law review articles and book chapters on constitutional criminal procedure topics. He is the author of The Supreme Court and the Fourth Amendment’s Exclusionary Rule (Oxford University Press 2013). In addition to his legal scholarship, Professor Maclin has authored over a dozen amicus curiae briefs and served as counsel of record for the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and the Cato Institute in Fourth Amendment cases in the United States Supreme Court.

Product Information
Edition
First Edition
Publication date
2024-09-15
Copyright Year
2024
Pages
1488
Connected eBook with Study Center + Hardcover
9798889061144
Connected eBook with Study Center (Digital Only)
9798889061168
Subject
Criminal Procedure
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