masthead


  NELLCO Repository Home

Customized Email Alerts by Subject Area

Search

My Account

NELLCO Home



poweredbybepress

 

   logo
Fordham University School of Law

Available Papers  •  Fordham University School of Law Web Site  •  Search the Collection  •  Policies
NELLCO LSR > FORDHAM > FLFC bealert

Institutional Coordination and Sentencing Reform
Daniel Richman, Forham University School of Law

Download the Paper (PDF format) - March 3, 2006 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:
Generally, treatments of prosecutorial discretion in the sentencing context tend to focus on its challenge to horizontal equity and judicial discretion within sentencing regimes. The goal in this symposium piece is to reverse the arrow, and, using an internal executive perspective, start looking at how sentencing regimes and judicial enforcement of those regimes can be used as tools for the hierarchical control of line prosecutors. It first considers a problem arising out of ostensibly successful regulation within a prosecutor’s offices - in this case, an effort to control plea bargaining in New Orleans. It then considers issues relating to regulation from outside the office, to see how judicial supervision of plea bargaining through factually intensive sentencing inquiries can reflect (and perhaps occur because of) the interest of a centralized prosecutorial authority in controlling its own minions.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Daniel Richman, "Institutional Coordination and Sentencing Reform" (March 3, 2006). Fordham University School of Law. Fordham Law Faculty Colloquium Papers. Paper 19.
http://lsr.nellco.org/fordham/flfc/papers/19




REPOSITORY HOME  | SEARCH  | MY ACCOUNT  | NELLCO HOME |
Powered by bepress.