Search for: "Brandon Garrett" Results 261 - 280 of 360
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12 Jan 2012, 6:45 am by Nabiha Syed
  Other coverage comes from USA Today, the Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, CNN, JURIST, AP, and Kent Scheidegger of Crime and Consequences; at ACSblog, Brandon Garrett compares the decision in Perry to the Court’s decision earlier this week in Smith v. [read post]
16 Jul 2019, 9:25 am by Thaddeus Hoffmeister
Garrett, Duke University School of Law   Keith A. [read post]
22 Apr 2011, 5:23 am by Walter Olson
Furor as NLRB issues complaint against Boeing for planning to open S.C. plant [Wichita Business Journal, Costa/NR "Corner", Wood/ShopFloor, more, Tom Bevan/RCP, Ira Stoll, Hirsch/Workplace Prof, Megan McArdle, Jonathan Adler] Perp meanwhile declared not criminally responsible and awaits release: “Jury orders Nordstrom to pay $1.6 M to Bethesda stabbing victims” [WaPo] Not so reliable: how eyewitness and confession testimony can result in convicting the innocent… [read post]
24 Aug 2011, 11:57 am by Daniel Solove
Garrett, Convicting the Innocent: Where Criminal Prosecutions Go Wrong R. [read post]
20 Jul 2012, 9:58 am by Viking
University of Virginia law professor Brandon Garrett told the newspaper that the instructions are the most detailed and careful in the country. [read post]
22 Aug 2011, 2:58 pm by Gritsforbreakfast
Garrett, a law professor at the University of Virginia.Many of those witnesses were as certain as they were wrong. [read post]
19 Jan 2012, 9:45 am
In the book "Convicting the Innocent: Where Criminal Prosecutions Go Wrong," University of Virginia law professor Brandon Garrett researched the cases of 250 people who were wrongfully convicted before DNA evidence proved their innocence. [read post]
15 Sep 2010, 9:56 am by Rob McKinney
Brandon Garrett of the University of Virginia School of Law has recently published a study of 40 other cases where a person gave a false confession that was later cleared of the crime by DNA evidence.One area of Mr.Garrett 's paper focused on police contamination of information . [read post]
14 Oct 2008, 9:16 am
(ht: How Appealing) And all too common; Brandon Garrett of the University of Virginia identified faulty eyewitness testimony as the leading cause of convictions later overturned via exculpating DNA evidence: The 200 exonerees were convicted based on eyewitness identifications (79 percent), forensic evidence (55 percent), informant testimony (18 percent), and false confessions (16 percent). [read post]
27 Aug 2012, 12:47 am by Lawrence Solum
Using the database of organizational convictions made publicly available by Professor Brandon Garrett, I find that no publicly traded company failed because of a conviction in the years 2001–2010. [read post]
11 Dec 2019, 2:36 pm by [email protected]
Brandon Garrett of Duke Law School in North Carolina who authored the book “Too Big to Jail,” says fines for white collar crimes have dropped as well as the number of cases brought. [read post]
30 Nov 2010, 2:50 pm
Garrett said he was concerned that so many departments still had no written policy. [read post]
11 Dec 2019, 2:36 pm by [email protected]
Brandon Garrett of Duke Law School in North Carolina who authored the book “Too Big to Jail,” says fines for white collar crimes have dropped as well as the number of cases brought. [read post]
14 Sep 2010, 4:31 am
” But more than 40 others have given confessions since 1976 that DNA evidence later showed were false, according to records compiled by Brandon L. [read post]
14 Sep 2010, 7:39 am by Nathan
law professor Brandon Garrett, into reasons why an innocent person may sometimes confess with extraordinary detail. [read post]
16 Sep 2010, 4:19 am by SHG
In the Times' article, Professor Brandon Garrett suggested recording of interrogations as part of the solution to false confessions. [read post]
29 Jul 2007, 7:09 pm
  Many of you surely saw the front page New York Times article devoted to Brandon Garrett's article, "Judging Innocence". [read post]
18 Oct 2010, 6:39 am by James Bickford
  Matthew Santoni of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review has a piece on the Bruesewitz family and the Wall Street Journal has an editorial on the case, while Brandon Garrett of ACSblog comments on Skinner. [read post]
13 Aug 2015, 8:02 am
  Garrett, Brandon L. (2011) Convicting the Innocent: Where Criminal Prosecutions Go Wrong. [read post]