Best in textbook rentals since 2012!
ISBN-10: 0735599580
ISBN-13: 9780735599581
Edition: 3rd 2012 (Student Manual, Study Guide, etc.)
List price: $49.95
Mkt
30 day, 100% satisfaction guarantee!
This item will ship on
Monday, April 1.
what's this?
Rush Rewards U
Members Receive:
You have reached 400 XP and carrot coins. That is the daily max!
Description:
An E&E for the second semester criminal procedure course, covering all thepost-arrest or “bail to jail” topics. Features:Time-tested examples-and-explanations pedagogy helps students mastermaterial.Clear and engaging writing style makes complex topics accessible tostudents.Comprehensive coverage makes this a complete student study aid for theCriminal Procedure II course.Effectively compares approaches taken by various jurisdictions.Sentencing chapter includes a detailed discussion of Apprendi,Blakely, and Booker. Professor Singer was counsel inApprendi.Well-known author.Only book to discuss victims’ rights.Highlights of the third edition will include:Continued focus, begun in the second… edition, of non-criminal trial remediesfor prosecutorial misconduct, particularly in light of the Duke LaCrosse case,and the Supreme Court’s decision in Van de Kamp and thedismissal, as moot, of Pottawattamie County, which raised the questionof prosecutorial civil liability for deliberate use of perjured testimony.The Court’s treatment of ABA standards, especially those relating to effectiveassistance of counsel, in light of Van Hook.Examination of the impact of Booker, Gall, and other decisions such asO’Brien on not only federal guidelines, but on state sentencingsystems as well.Emphasis on the continuing struggle with rules of discovery, both as aconstitutional matter, and as a matter of court rules, both federal and state.The Court’s apparent expansion of the right to counsel, in Rothgery and othercases, and the belief, among commentators, that Rothgery will, in the nearfuture, be expanded to reach appointed counsel.The Court’s willingness, as seen in Padilla v. Kentucky, to impose on counsel,but not on judges, the duty to provide defendants prior to entry of a guiltyplea of important information on collateral matters.