Plea Bargaining Made Real

The negotiation of a disposition in a criminal case is a very human process. This book examines the law of plea bargaining without ever losing sight of this critical perspective.
eBook :epub
$24.00
Quantity
In Stock
ISBN: 9781531019921
International Order Inquiry

Product description

View a sample of this title using the ReadNow feature

By looking at the motivations of the three critical parties to any plea bargain—the prosecutor, defense attorney/defendant, and the judge—Plea Bargaining Made Real explains why, in the words of former Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, “criminal justice today is for the most part a system of pleas, not a system of trials.” Looking at the impact these motivations play in the conduct and decisions of these parties, the book offers a clearer and more realistic understanding of the process.

Through comparing plea-bargaining court decisions with the actual ways in which guilty pleas come about, the book illustrates not just the dishonesty of the judicial approach to issues arising from plea bargaining, but also the damage that such dishonesty causes. Grossman also discusses other important and controversial aspects of plea bargaining such as types of guilty pleas, the impact of systemic racism in plea bargaining, and the applicability of contract law principles to plea agreements.

The negotiation of a disposition in a criminal case is a very human process. This book examines the law of plea bargaining without ever losing sight of this critical perspective. It offers suggestions for how prosecutors, defense attorneys, judges, and the criminal justice system itself can make the plea bargaining system fairer and more transparent.

epub is protected by Adobe DRM.

eBooks, CDs, downloadable content, and software purchases are noncancelable, nonrefundable and nonreturnable. Click here for more information about LexisNexis eBooks. The eBook versions of this title may feature links to Lexis+® for further legal research options. A valid subscription to Lexis+® is required to access this content.