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Comprehensive Criminal Procedure, Fifth Edition: 2024 Supplement

Authors
  • Ronald J. Allen
  • Joseph L. Hoffmann
  • Debra A. Livingston
  • Andrew D. Leipold
  • Tracey L. Meares
Series / Supplements
Teaching Materials
NO
Description
Table of contents
The 2024 Supplement accompanies the Fifth Edition of the authors’ Comprehensive Criminal Procedure casebook, and includes all relevant rules and statutes, as well as all significant United States Supreme Court cases from October Terms 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2023.

What’s Most Important in the 2024 Supplement:
  • Torres v. Madrid (on the meaning of “seizures” under the Fourth Amendment
  • Caniglia v. Strom (on the definition of “exigent circumstances” under the Fourth Amendment
  • New note cases on the effective assistance of counsel in capital cases; the consequences of a Miranda violation; the immunity of a sitting President to a grand jury subpoena; changes of venue; the application of the Confrontation Clause to expert witnesses; the use of redaction to satisfy the Bruton rule; the continued viability of the Almendarez-Torres exception to Apprendi; the “dual sovereignty” doctrine in double jeopardy law; and the retroactivity of new Supreme Court decisions in federal habeas corpus
  • Full text of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure
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About the authors
Joseph L. Hoffmann
Harry Pratter Professor of Law
Indiana University Maurer School of Law

Joseph L. Hoffman is the Harry Pratter Professor of Law at Indiana University Maurer School of Law.

Andrew D. Leipold

Professor Andrew Leipold, the Edwin M. Adams Professor of Law at the University of Illinois College of Law, graduated summa cum laude in public relations from Boston University. He received his J.D. from the University of Virginia School of Law, where he was a member of Order of the Coif and editor-in-chief of the Virginia Law Review. After graduation, he served as clerk to Judge Abner Mikva of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and to Justice Lewis Powell, Jr., of the United States Supreme Court. He then worked for Morgan, Lewis & Bockius in Philadelphia.

Since joining the faculty in 1992, Professor Leipold has been voted Outstanding Faculty Member eight times and received the Campus Award for Excellence in Graduate and Professional Teaching in 2000. Most recently, he served for two and one-half years as associate dean for Academic Affairs. He has been a visiting professor at Boston College Law School and Duke University School of Law, where he was recognized with the Distinguished Teaching Award.

Professor Leipold writes in the area of criminal law and procedure and has served as a consultant to the Illinois Criminal Law Reform Commission, the Governor’s Truth in Sentencing Commission, and the Office of the Independent Counsel for the Whitewater Investigation. His most recent publication is entitled, The Impact of Joinder & Severance on Federal Criminal Cases: An Empirical Study (59 Vanderbilt Law Review). In 2005, he published How the Pretrial Process Contributes to Wrongful Convictions (42 American Criminal Law Review 1123), Why are Federal Judges So Acquittal Prone (83 Washington University Law Quarterly 151), The Grand Jury Clause of the Fifth Amendment (Heritage Foundation Guide to the Constitution), Strategy and Remorse in Capital Trials (80 Indiana Law Journal 47), and Volumes 1 and 1A in Federal Practice and Procedure: Criminal (3d ed.). His essay, The Limits of Deterrence Theory in the War on Drugs, was published in a symposium issue of The Journal of Gender, Race & Justice at the University of Iowa, and he authored a chapter in Controversial Issues in Criminal Justice and Criminology. Other articles include The Problem of the Innocent, Acquitted Defendant (94 Northwestern University Law Review 1297, 2001), and Constitutionalizing Jury Selection in Criminal Cases (86 Georgetown Law Journal 945, 1998).

Product Information
Edition
Fifth Edition
Publication date
2024-08-30
Copyright Year
2024
Pages
246
Digital First
9798892076838
Subject
Criminal Procedure
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