Law Review Articles
Law Review Articles
I
While most prosecutors adhere to the maxim that their primary task is to obtain just results, there are some who violate their ethical responsibilities in order to rack up convictions.
II
The Court should abandon its confusing absolute prosecutorial immunity jurisprudence once and for all.
III
The criminal prosecutor ‘‘may strike hard blows,’’ but ‘‘he is not at liberty to strike foul ones.’’ Prosecutors routinely strike foul blows, obtaining convictions while concealing evidence.
2016-2020
- 2020, Flipping the Script on Brady, Indiana Law Journal
- 2020, New York Creates Commission on Prosecutor Conduct
- 2019, Disclosing Prosecutorial Misconduct, Vanderbilt Law Review
- 2019, A Rule 11 for Prosecutors, Tennessee Law Review
- 2019, The Integrity of Our Convictions: Holding Stakeholders Accountable in an Era of Criminal Justice Reform, Georgetown Law Review
- 2018, Non-Brady Legal and Ethical Obligations on Prosecutors to Disclose Exculpatory Evidence
- 2017, Prosecutorial Analytics, Washington University Law Review
- 2016, Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0, Notre Dame Law Review
2010-2015
- 2015, Criminal Law 2.0, Georgetown Law Journal
- 2015, The Chronic Failure to Discipline Prosecutors for Misconduct: Proposals for Reform, The Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology
- 2014, Prosecutorial Misconduct: Comparing American And Foreign Approaches To A Pervasive Problem And Devising Possible Solutions, Arizona Journal of International & Comparative Law
- 2014, The Brady Colloquy, Stanford Law Review
- 2012, Beyond Absolute Immunity, Northwestern Law Review
- 2012, “Somebody Help Me Understand This”: The Supreme Court’s Interpretation of Prosecutorial Immunity and Liability under 1983, Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology
- 2011, Connick v. Thompson: An Immunity that Admits of (Almost Liabilities), Cato Institute