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Announcing HendersonBot
I for one welcome our robot doppelgangers.
categories: academia, adjudication, artificial intelligence, criminal law, crimprof blog, investigation, law school, scholarship, slider, teaching, technology
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Selecting a Criminal Procedure Casebook
Law school casebooks should not cost $300… but they also cannot (sustainably) be free.
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Teaching Law
What would Socrates do… with the history of American legal education, Langdell’s case method, and contemporary cognitive science?
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Ripeness, Supervised Release, and the Right to Counsel
If not at the sentencing hearing, then the answer to _when_ might effectively be never.
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Double Jeopardy Same Offense Stays the Same… For Now
The Court unanimously agrees that Congress intended only a single conviction, ending the matter… except to Gorsuch.
categories: adjudication, cases of interest, constitution, crimprof blog, fifth amendment, scholarship, slider, supreme courtTags: double jeopardy
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Let’s Be Reasonable About Geofence Warrants (Part 5) – New Jersey v. Bryant
The NJ Superior Court’s Appellate Division takes a measured (if less than ideal) approach to cell tower dumps, and this time in a published opinion.
categories: cases of interest, constitution, crimprof blog, fourth amendment, investigation, privacy, scholarship, slider, technology
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Rehabilitating Einstein – What Quantum Discomfort Can Teach the Criminal Law
When even quantum scientists aren’t sure… what can the criminal law learn but humility?
categories: artificial intelligence, books, criminal law, crimprof blog, scholarship, slider, technology
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Bar Journals Censoring Criticism of State Judges
Do bar journals outside of Oklahoma similarly engage in viewpoint discrimination?
categories: bench and bar, constitution, crimprof blog, ethics, first amendment, scholarship, slider