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Written in a student-friendly manner, the fourth edition of Criminal Procedure: Adjudicationeschews excessive reliance on rhetorical questions and law review excerpts in favor of comprehensive exploration of black letter law and current policy issues. Authored by a pair of well-respected criminal and constitutional law scholars, Criminal Procedure: Adjudicationutilizes a chronological approach that guides students through criminal procedure doctrine, from prosecution initiation to habeas corpus relief. In addition to presenting the perspectives from various stakeholders (e.g. defense attorneys, judges, prosecutors, and victims), the authors take care to provide students with useful, practice-oriented materials, including pleadings and motions papers. Criminal Procedure: Adjudicationnot only employs a systemic approach that takes students through each step of criminal adjudication, but also introduces issues at the forefront of modern criminal procedure debates.
New to the Fourth Edition:
The Fourth Edition has been thoroughly updated to provide analysis of important, recent decisions in the area of Criminal Procedure, including several decisions from the Supreme Court’s most recent terms and discussion of policy issues at the forefront of criminal law.
New cases include McCoy v. Louisiana (Sixth Amendment right to counsel); Ramos v. Louisiana (trial by jury); Flowers v. Mississippi (jury composition and selection); Jones v. Mississippi (sentencing); Bucklew v. Precythe (the death penalty); and Gamble v. United States (the dual sovereignty doctrine in double jeopardy)
Professors and student will benefit from:
Straightforward writing style and dynamic text
Clear and not cluttered with law reviews excerpts
Relies on cases and author essays rather than excerpts and rhetoric questions
Presents thoughtfully edited principal and note cases
Intuitive organization and chronological presentation
Presents topics in easy-to-understand approach from prosecution to post-conviction relief
Approachable organization based on common progression through criminal justice system
Systematic and cohesive presentation of topics
Explores underlying policy before heading into doctrinal specifics
Practice-oriented features
Discussion of important, modern criminal procedure issues
Useful examples for future and current criminal law practitioners
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Laurie Levenson is a Professor of Law, William M. Rains Fellow and Director of the Center for Ethical Advocacy at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. While in law school, Laurie Levenson was chief articles editor of the UCLA Law Review. After graduation, she served as law clerk to the Honorable James Hunter III of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. In 1981, she was appointed assistant United States Attorney, Criminal Section, in Los Angeles, where she was a trial and appellate lawyer for eight years and attained the position of senior trial attorney and assistant division chief. Levenson was a member of the adjunct faculty of Southwestern University Law School from 1982-89. She joined the Loyola faculty in 1989 and served as Loyola#39;s associate dean for academic affairs from 1996-99.