Read The Constitution and Criminal Procedure: First Principles by Akhil Reed Amar Online

! Read # The Constitution and Criminal Procedure: First Principles by Akhil Reed Amar ↠ eBook or Kindle ePUB. The Constitution and Criminal Procedure: First Principles "very informative" according to Robert W. Smith. Professor Amar has written a fine book in, "The Constitution and Criminal Procedure". Overly thin - the critical elements are included, but, not particularly helpful. Written 11 years ago, it's somewhat out of date. Tends to read the constitution in much more literal and original terms than most defense attorneys. Okay. I wish that it had been more comprehensive and thoughtful. I'd give this a solid B. I'd recommend reading some of the newer and m

The Constitution and Criminal Procedure: First Principles

Title : The Constitution and Criminal Procedure: First Principles
Author :
Rating : 4.92 (696 Votes)
Asin : 0300066783
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 288 Pages
Publish Date : 2017-12-07
Language : English

"very informative" according to Robert W. Smith. Professor Amar has written a fine book in, "The Constitution and Criminal Procedure". Overly thin - the critical elements are included, but, not particularly helpful. Written 11 years ago, it's somewhat out of date. Tends to read the constitution in much more literal and original terms than most defense attorneys. Okay. I wish that it had been more comprehensive and thoughtful. I'd give this a solid B. I'd recommend reading some of the newer and more comprehensive and better researched texts.. Lays out criminal procedure for lay persons and lawyers Tung Yin Akhil Amar, a distinguished law professor at Yale University, has written a very accessible book that discusses what's wrong with criminal procedure today.Most people tend to think that the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments protect the guilty far more than society. For example, under the Exclusionary Rule, courts must suppress evidence that is obtained unlawfully, even if the suppression results in letting criminals free. (Studies show that in reality, the percentage of cases in which criminals escape prosecution on technicalities is quite low.) Notwithstanding the cries of the ACLU and other defenders of criminal rights (such as Ala

Akhil Amar examines the role of search warrants, the status of the exclusionary rule, self-incrimination theory and practice, and a host of Sixth Amendment trial-related rights. Deterrence of government misconduct should in general occur through civil damage suits and administrative sanctions rather than through criminal exclusion. He argues that the exclusion of reliable evidence in criminal trials is wrong in principle and in practice and that unlawfully seized evidence and fruits of immunized testimony sh

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