| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | key Terms in Title |
| Alexis Karteron |
When Stop and Frisk Comes Home: Policing Public and Patrolled Housing |
69 Case Western Reserve Law Review 669 (Spring, 2019) |
In response to programmatic stop-and-frisk, police killings, and other recent controversies in American policing, many have called for smart policing--the evidence-based deployment of police resources. An often-heralded example of smart policing is hot spots policing, which involves directing police attention to locations where crime and disorder... |
2019 |
Yes |
| Sarah Lamdan |
When Westlaw Fuels Ice Surveillance: Legal Ethics in the Era of Big Data Policing |
43 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 255 (2019) |
Legal research companies are selling surveillance data and services to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other law enforcement agencies. This Article discusses ethical issues that arise when lawyers buy and use legal research services sold by the same vendors responsible for building ICE's surveillance systems. As the legal... |
2019 |
Yes |
| Courtney E. Lewis |
Where the Constitution Falls Short: Confession Admissibility and Police Regulation |
123 Dickinson Law Review 551 (Winter, 2019) |
A confession presented at trial is one of the most damning pieces of evidence against a criminal defendant, which means that the rules governing its admissibility are critical. At the outset of confession admissibility in the United States, the judiciary focused on a confession's truthfulness. Culminating in the landmark case Miranda v. Arizona,; Search Snippet: ...2019 Comment WHERE THE CONSTITUTION FALLS SHORT: CONFESSION ADMISSIBILITY AND POLICE REGULATION Courtney E. Lewis [FNa1] Copyright © 2019 by The Pennsylvania... |
2019 |
Yes |
| Chan Tov McNamarah |
White Caller Crime: Racialized Police Communication and Existing While Black |
24 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 335 (Spring, 2019) |
Over the past year, reports to the police about Black persons engaged in innocuous behaviors have bombarded the American consciousness. What do we make of them? And, equally important, what are the consequences of such reports? This Article is the first to argue that the recent spike in calls to the police against Black persons who are simply... |
2019 |
Yes |
| Ariana H. Aboulafia |
Who Ya Gonna Call? An Analysis of Paradigm Shifts and Social Harms as a Result of Hyper-viral Police Violence |
10 University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review Rev. 1 (Fall, 2019) |
I. INTRODUCTION. 3 II. Ferguson is Everywhere -Why Good-Faith Individuals Are Reluctant to Call the Police. 4 (1) Adding Fuel to the Fire - Enhanced Fear of Calling Police in Minorities. 4 (1)(a) Changes in Policing. 6 (1)(b) Tough on Crime Policies that Target Minority Communities. 9 (1)(c) Hyper-Viral Police Violence, From Rodney King to... |
2019 |
Yes |
| Ariana H. Aboulafia |
Who Ya Gonna Call? An Analysis of Paradigm Shifts and Social Harms as a Result of Hyper-viral Police Violence |
10 University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review 1 (Fall, 2019) |
I. INTRODUCTION. 3 II. Ferguson is Everywhere -Why Good-Faith Individuals Are Reluctant to Call the Police. 4 (1) Adding Fuel to the Fire - Enhanced Fear of Calling Police in Minorities. 4 (1)(a) Changes in Policing. 6 (1)(b) Tough on Crime Policies that Target Minority Communities. 9 (1)(c) Hyper-Viral Police Violence, From Rodney King to; Search Snippet: ...SHIFTS AND SOCIAL HARMS AS A RESULT OF HYPER-VIRAL POLICE VIOLENCE Ariana H. Aboulafia [FNa1] Copyright © 2019 by the University... |
2019 |
Yes |
| Alexis Holmes |
Zoning, Race, and Marijuana: the Unintended Consequences of Proposition 64 |
23 Lewis & Clark Law Review 939 (2019) |
This Article revisits the campaign to legalize cannabis in California with Proposition 64. It then dissects the localism within the new California regulations and how it conflicts with the social justice goals central to the spirit of Proposition 64's passage. With local governments retaining control over marijuana in their jurisdictions, land use... |
2019 |
|
| Bethany Krystek |
9-1-1, What's Your Risk? Minimizing the Risk of Police Violence Through Computer-assisted Dispatch |
70 Federal Communications Law Journal 373 (September, 2018) |
C1-2Table of Contents I. Introduction. 375 II. Background. 376 A. The Development of Police Dispatch Technology. 376 1. The First Police Communication Systems. 376 2. The Creation of 9-1-1. 378 3. The Current Regime: Computer Aided Dispatch Systems. 379 B. The Rise in Police Use of Excessive Force. 380 C. The Psychology Behind Excessive Force. 384... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Magda Boutros |
A Multidimensional View of Legal Cynicism: Perceptions of the Police among Anti-harassment Teams in Egypt |
52 Law and Society Review 368 (June, 2018) |
In Egypt in 2012, several anti-harassment groups were established to respond to an increase in sexual violence in public spaces and to the failure of the state to tackle the issue. Anti-harassment groups organized patrol-type intervention teams that operated during demonstrations or public celebrations to stop sexual assaults. This article examines... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Owen Doherty |
A Reform to Police Department Hiring: Preventing the Tragedy of Police Misconduct |
68 Case Western Reserve Law Review 1259 (Summer, 2018) |
C1-2Contents Introduction. 1259 I. Police Misconduct Defined. 1266 A. Criminal Activity. 1267 B. Corruption. 1270 C. Unconstitutional Activities. 1272 D. Racial Profiling and Bias. 1275 II. The Challenges of Preventing Hiring Officers with Poor History. 1277 A. Confidentiality Agreements. 1278 B. Police Unions, Police Culture, and the Blue Wall of... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Kelli L. Cover |
Baltimore City Schools Need Many Things - a Personal Police Force Is Not One of Them |
48 University of Baltimore Law Forum 69 (Spring, 2018) |
When children attend schools that place a greater value on discipline and security than on knowledge and intellectual development, they are attending prep schools for prison. This is one example through which Angela Davis explained the damaging impacts of systems that replicate the structures of prisons, particularly on poor communities of color.... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Stacy L. Hawkins |
Batson for Judges, Police Officers & Teachers: Lessons in Democracy from the Jury Box |
23 Michigan Journal of Race and Law L. 1 (2017-2018) |
In our representative democracy we guarantee equal participation for all, but we fall short of this promise in so many domains of our civic life. From the schoolhouse, to the jailhouse, to the courthouse, racial minorities are underrepresented among key public decision-makers, such as judges, police officers, and teachers. This gap between our... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Stacy L. Hawkins |
Batson for Judges, Police Officers & Teachers: Lessons in Democracy from the Jury Box |
23 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 1 (2017-2018) |
In our representative democracy we guarantee equal participation for all, but we fall short of this promise in so many domains of our civic life. From the schoolhouse, to the jailhouse, to the courthouse, racial minorities are underrepresented among key public decision-makers, such as judges, police officers, and teachers. This gap between our; Search Snippet: ...of Race and Law 2017-2018 Article BATSON FOR JUDGES, POLICE OFFICERS & TEACHERS: LESSONS IN DEMOCRACY FROM THE JURY BOX Stacy... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Franciska Coleman |
Between the "Facts and Norms" of Police Violence: Using Discourse Models to Improve Deliberations Around Law Enforcement |
47 Hofstra Law Review 489 (Winter 2018) |
Police violence and protests of police violence have become a common feature of today's news cycles and have led to widespread critique and distrust of the law enforcement apparatus and police practice. States and municipalities have responded to the delegitimization of police practice with community-police dialogues. This Article argues that such... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Kiel Brennan-Marquez |
Big Data Policing and the Redistribution of Anxiety |
15 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 487 (Spring, 2018) |
By equipping police with data, what are we trying to accomplish? Certain answers ring familiar. For one thing, we are trying to make criminal justice decisions, plagued as they often are by inaccuracy and bias, more refined. For another, we are trying to boost the efficiency of governance institutions--police departments, prosecutor's offices,... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Emmanuel Mauleón |
Black Twice: Policing Black Muslim Identities |
65 UCLA Law Review 1326 (June, 2018) |
In a political moment that includes various iterations of a Muslim Ban, and a resurgent mainstreaming of white nationalism, race and religion clearly remain hotly contested in American life. And yet, in much of the recent scholarship and public debate on these issues, the intersecting experiences of Black Muslims are often elided, if not entirely... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Dr. Bridgette Baldwin |
Black, White, and Blue: Bias, Profiling, and Policing in the Age of Black Lives Matter |
40 Western New England Law Review 431 (2018) |
Most middle-class whites have no idea what it feels like to be subjected to police who are routinely suspicious, rude, belligerent, and brutal. Benjamin Spock On July 17, 2014, in Staten Island, New York, Eric Garner lost his life to an illegal chokehold at the hands of police officer Daniel Pantaleo. With his last words, Garner uttered the... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Timothy Zindel |
Blue: the Lapd and the Battle to Redeem American Policing by Joe Domanick Simon & Schuster (2016) |
42-JUN Champion 59 (June, 2018) |
Blue is an excellent and readable account of efforts to reform Los Angeles policing after the Rodney King riots, which followed the state court acquittal in a cop-heavy white enclave of the four officers who beat King nearly to death. That beating differed from similar LAPD beatings in that it occurred under the watchful eye of George Holliday, who... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Mary D. Fan |
Body Cameras, Big Data, and Police Accountability |
43 Law and Social Inquiry 1236 (Fall, 2018) |
The increase in data from police-worn body cameras can illuminate formerly opaque practices. This article discusses using audiovisual big data from police-worn body cameras, citizen recordings, and other sources to address blind spots in police oversight. Based on body camera policies in America's largest cities, it discusses two possible... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Thomas Gardiner , Patrick Molinari |
Body Cameras: a New Era in Policing |
30 DCBA Brief 8 (May, 2018) |
The next time you are approached by an officer in Cook County, your eye may be drawn to a black, boxy attachment to the officer's chest. Despite its innocuous appearance, this new accessory (reminiscent of a 1980's pager) has become one of the most powerful tools in the officer's arsenal. Body worn cameras, colloquially referred to as police body; Search Snippet: ...Raleigh D. Kalbfleisch [FNa1] BODY CAMERAS: A NEW ERA IN POLICING Thomas Gardiner [FNa2] Patrick Molinari [FNa3] Copyright © 2018 by DCBA... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Rick Trinkner, Jonathan Jackson, Tom R. Tyler, Arizona State University, London School of Economics and Political Science, Yale Law School |
Bounded Authority: Expanding "Appropriate" Police Behavior Beyond Procedural Justice |
42 Law and Human Behavior 280 (June, 2018) |
This paper expands previous conceptualizations of appropriate police behavior beyond procedural justice. The focus of the current study is on the notion of bounded authority--that is, acting within the limits of one's rightful authority. According to work on legal socialization, U.S. citizens come to acquire three dimensions of values that; Search Snippet: ...Law and Human Behavior June, 2018 BOUNDED AUTHORITY: EXPANDING APPROPRIATE POLICE BEHAVIOR BEYOND PROCEDURAL JUSTICE [FNa1] Rick Trinkner Arizona State University... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Emma O'Rourke-Friel |
Bring out the Bearcat! Reprioritizing the Transfer of Dod Property under the 1033 Program |
48 Public Contract Law Journal 147 (Fall, 2018) |
C1-3TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Introduction. 148 II. Background: Principles and Practices of the Federal Property Disposal Regime. 151 A. Defining the Mission: The Evolution of, and Property Available Under, the 1033 Program. 152 B. DoD's Disposal Process: An Overview, and Where 1033 Fits In. 157 III. Deprioritization: Realigning the 1033 Program with; Search Snippet: ...law enforcement agencies through the 1033 program. In October 2014, police in a small New Hampshire town confronted a drunken riot... |
2018 |
|
| Keegan Stephan |
Conspiracy: Contemporary Gang Policing and Prosecutions |
40 Cardozo Law Review 991 (December, 2018) |
Surely gang members cannot be decreed to be outlaws, subject to the merest whim of the police as the rest of us are not. C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 992 I. Background: Gang Policing and the Law. 998 A. Gang Policing Before Morales. 998 B. Vagueness Doctrine. 1000 C. Morales. 1003 D. The Application of Morales. 1006 E. Vagueness Doctrine... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Rachel Moran |
Contesting Police Credibility |
93 Washington Law Review 1339 (October, 2018) |
Criminal cases often amount to credibility contests between two actors: the complainant, testifying for the government, and the defendant. In theory, the defendant's opportunity to attack the credibility of government witnesses should be equal to or greater than the government's opportunity to attack the credibility of the defendant,... |
2018 |
Yes |
| James M. Binnall |
Cops and Convicts: an Exploratory Field Study of Jurymandering |
16 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 221 (Fall, 2018) |
Since 1972, scholars have used the term jurymandering to describe jury selection procedures that eliminate classes of citizens from the adjudicative process. Today, the most prominent mass exclusion of prospective jurors targets the estimated nineteen million Americans with a felonious criminal history. Forty-nine states, the federal government,; Search Snippet: ...LAW Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law Fall, 2018 Commentary COPS AND CONVICTS: AN EXPLORATORY FIELD STUDY OF JURYMANDERING James M... |
2018 |
|
| Arthur H. Garrison |
Criminal Culpability, Civil Liability, and Police Created Danger: Why and How the Fourth Amendment Provides Very Limited Protection from Police Use of Deadly Force |
28 George Mason University Civil Rights Law Journal 241 (Summer, 2018) |
On November 22, 2014, two Cleveland, Ohio police officers received a call to investigate a guy with a gun outside a rec center. The caller told the 911 dispatcher the gunman was probably a juvenile and that the gun might not be real; however, dispatch did not communicate those points to the officers. The police were only told by the dispatcher; Search Snippet: ...Law Journal Summer, 2018 Article CRIMINAL CULPABILITY, CIVIL LIABILITY, AND POLICE CREATED DANGER: WHY AND HOW THE FOURTH AMENDMENT PROVIDES VERY LIMITED PROTECTION FROM POLICE USE OF DEADLY FORCE [FNd1] Arthur H. Garrison [FNa1] Copyright... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Bennett Capers |
Criminal Procedure, the Police, and the Wire as Dissent |
2018 University of Chicago Legal Forum 65 (2018) |
The Wire is rich with metaphors. There is the physical wire in the opening credits, a metaphor for surveillance more generally. There is the metaphor of the wire in the sense of a modern tightrope--another filmic work, Man on a Wire, comes to mind--where any minute one can lose one's balance. There is even the metaphor of the wire in the sense that... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Rachel Abanonu |
De-escalating Police-citizen Encounters |
27 Southern California Review of Law & Social Justice 239 (Summer, 2018) |
C1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION. 240 II. DE-ESCALATION TRAINING. 242 A. Background. 242 B. Basics of Police De-Escalation Training. 245 C. Comparing Police Department Training Programs. 248 1. New York. 249 2. Dallas. 249 3. Las Vegas. 250 4. Cincinnati. 251 5. Los Angeles. 252 6. Salt Lake City. 253 7; Search Snippet: ...Review of Law & Social Justice Summer, 2018 Note DE-ESCALATING POLICE-CITIZEN ENCOUNTERS Rachel Abanonu [FNa1] Copyright © 2018 by the University... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Mary D. Fan |
Democratizing Proof: Pooling Public and Police Body-camera Videos |
96 North Carolina Law Review 1639 (June, 2018) |
There are two cultural revolutions in recording the police. From the vantage of police departments, there is the rapidly spreading uptake of police-worn body cameras. On the public side, community members are increasingly using their cell phone cameras to record the police. Together, these dual recording revolutions are generating important new... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Joshua J. Reynolds, Victoria Estrada-Reynolds , Narina Nunez , Stockton University, University of Wyoming |
Development and Validation of the Attitudes Towards Police Legitimacy Scale |
42 Law and Human Behavior 119 (April, 2018) |
Although there is a substantial body of work examining attitudes towards the police, no measure has been developed to consistently capture citizens' beliefs regarding police legitimacy. Given that police conduct has garnered a great deal of attention, particularly in the last few years, the current research sought to develop a scale measuring... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Mark S. Brodin |
Discriminatory Job Knowledge Tests, Police Promotions, and What Title Vii Can Learn from Tort Law |
59 Boston College Law Review 2319 (October, 2018) |
Introduction. 2321 I. The Critical Importance of Selecting Skilled police Supervisors. 2329 II. What We Want in a police Supervisor: Knowledge, Skills, and Character. 2335 III. Job Knowledge Exams--The Massachusetts Experience and Beyond. 2337 IV. The Current Regime: The Validation Game and the Dilution of Standards. 2344 V. Lopez v. CITY of... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Cedric Merlin Powell , Laura McNeal |
Dismantling Structural Inequality: Lock Ups, Systemic Chokeholds, and Race-based Policing--a Symposium Summary |
57 University of Louisville Law Review Rev. 1 (2018) |
The prominence of the carceral state in American society serves to undermine basic principles of democracy and justice, disproportionately displacing people of color and excluding them from all viable avenues of citizenship. Three recent books explore the criminal justice system and structural inequality. In Chokehold, Professor Paul Butler... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Cedric Merlin Powell , Laura McNeal |
Dismantling Structural Inequality: Lock Ups, Systemic Chokeholds, and Race-based Policing--a Symposium Summary |
57 University of Louisville Law Review 1 (2018) |
The prominence of the carceral state in American society serves to undermine basic principles of democracy and justice, disproportionately displacing people of color and excluding them from all viable avenues of citizenship. Three recent books explore the criminal justice system and structural inequality. In Chokehold, Professor Paul Butler; Search Snippet: ...2018 Article DISMANTLING STRUCTURAL INEQUALITY: LOCK UPS, SYSTEMIC CHOKEHOLDS, AND RACE-BASED POLICING--A SYMPOSIUM SUMMARY Cedric Merlin Powell [FNa1] Laura McNeal [FNaa1... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Nick Place |
Double Due Process: How Police Unions and Law Enforcement "Bills of Rights" Enable Police Violence and Prevent Accountability |
52 University of San Francisco Law Review 275 (2018) |
LAW ENFORCEMENT BILLS OF RIGHTS, or LEOBORs, create double due process by taking the sacred constitutional rights of people suspected of criminal wrongdoing and transplanting those rights onto the internal disciplinary process. LEOBORs are either codified at the state level or woven into contracts and collective bargaining agreements. Police... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Katelyn Rowe |
Examining the Value-add of Non-adversarial Processes in the Immediate Aftermath of Police Shootings |
27 Boston University Public Interest Law Journal 133 (Winter, 2018) |
I. Introduction. 134 II. Criticisms of Adversarial Processes. 136 III. The Potential Value-Add of Non-Adversarial Processes. 139 A. Community Policing as a Non-Adversarial Process. 141 B. Procedural Justice as a Non-Adversarial Process. 143 C. Building Police-Community Partnerships as a Non-Adversarial Process. 145 D. Current Lack of Literature on... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Paul J. Larkin, Jr. , David L. Rosenthal |
Flight, Race, and Terry Stops: Commonwealth V. Warren |
16 Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy 163 (Winter, 2018) |
Police officers find critical the ability to stop, question, and frisk someone who is reasonably suspected of being involved in a crime and of being armed. In 1968, the Supreme Court of the United States approved that practice in Terry v. Ohio. Since then, officers and courts have consistently found that a person's unprovoked flight at the sight of... |
2018 |
|
| Harris Freeman |
Foreword--police Misconduct and Kibbe V. City of Springfield |
40 Western New England Law Review 393 (2018) |
The Law Review's 2017 symposium, Perspectives on Racial Justice in the Era of #BlackLivesMatter, appropriately opened with a panel that addressed the ongoing challenge of combatting police misconduct, as seen through the lens of Kibbe v. City of Springfield, a civil rights case that unfolded in Western Massachusetts and reached the United States... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Arielle W. Tolman, David M. Shapiro |
From City Council to the Streets: Protesting Police Misconduct after Lozman V. City of Riviera Beach |
13 Charleston Law Review 49 (Fall, 2018) |
In June 2018, in Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach, the Supreme Court held 8-1 that the existence of probable cause for arrest does not categorically bar a First Amendment claim for damages. At issue in the case was the City of Riviera Beach's arrest of resident Fane Lozman as he spoke against public corruption during a city council meeting. In this... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Mary N. Beall |
Gutting the Fourth Amendment: Judicial Complicity in Racial Profiling and the Real-life Implications |
36 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 145 (Winter, 2018) |
Thirteen years, eleven months, twenty-two days, and approximately forty-six police stops filled the time between Philando Castile's first and final traffic stop. The majority of Mr. Castile's interactions with Minnesota's law enforcement officers were initiated pursuant to minor traffic infractions and only six stop records detailed traffic... |
2018 |
|
| Jonathan M. Warren |
Hidden in Plain View: Juries and the Implicit Credibility Given to Police Testimony |
11 DePaul Journal for Social Justice Just. 1 (Summer, 2018) |
From the perspective of today's cultural zeitgeist, police officers are either noble keepers of civilization or wicked manipulators of justice. Officers either chivalrously lay down their lives to protect the public, or corruptibly oppress the downtrodden. As with many things, however, the truth lies somewhere between these two extremes, and... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Jonathan M. Warren |
Hidden in Plain View: Juries and the Implicit Credibility Given to Police Testimony |
11 DePaul Journal for Social Justice 1 (Summer, 2018) |
From the perspective of today's cultural zeitgeist, police officers are either noble keepers of civilization or wicked manipulators of justice. Officers either chivalrously lay down their lives to protect the public, or corruptibly oppress the downtrodden. As with many things, however, the truth lies somewhere between these two extremes, and; Search Snippet: ...IN PLAIN VIEW: JURIES AND THE IMPLICIT CREDIBILITY GIVEN TO POLICE TESTIMONY Jonathan M. Warren Copyright © 2018 by DePaul University; Jonathan... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Nazgol Ghandnoosh , The Sentencing Project, Washington, DC, 202-628-0871, Email nghandnoosh@sentencingproject.org, Website www.sentencingproject.org |
How Defense Attorneys Can Eliminate Racial Disparities in Criminal Justice |
42-JUN Champion 36 (June, 2018) |
Why did Judge Aaron Persky not sentence Stanford University student-athlete Brock Turner to longer than six months in jail for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman? Why was Texas teenager Ethan Couch, characterized as suffering from affluenza sentenced to only probation for a drunk driving accident that killed four people? Why was Dylann... |
2018 |
|
| Jesus A. Alonso |
How Police Culture Affects the Way Police Departments View and Utilize Deadly Force Policies under the Fourth Amendment |
60 Arizona Law Review 987 (2018) |
Police are an important part of our criminal justice system. When people begin to lose faith and trust in the police, chaos inevitably erupts. Although we are not at a breaking point yet, recent controversies and examinations of police departments have found that there are disparities in police use-of-force strategies that allow some police... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Ronald J. Rychlak , John M. Czarnetzky |
How the International Criminal Court's Inability to Deal with Terrorism Is Leading to Calls for International Policing |
87 Mississippi Law Journal 577 (2018) |
Introduction. 577 I. International Criminal Court and Terrorism. 579 A. Introduction: The ICC and ISIS. 581 B. ICC Jurisdiction and ISIS. 583 C. The ICC's Lack of Police Power and Terrorism. 585 II. Toward An International Police Force?. 588 Conclusion. 597; Search Snippet: ...TO DEAL WITH TERRORISM IS LEADING TO CALLS FOR INTERNATIONAL POLICING Ronald J. Rychlak [FNa1] John M. Czarnetzky [FNaa1] Copyright © 2018... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Morgan Namian |
Hypermasculine Police and Vulnerable Victims: the Detrimental Impact of Police Ideologies on the Rape Reporting Process |
40 Women's Rights Law Reporter 80 (Fall/Winter 2018) |
On May 25, 2018, noted sexual predator Harvey Weinstein turned himself into the police in response to charges alleging that he raped a woman in 2013 and forced another to give him oral sex in 2004. Months earlier, in October 2017, stories about Weinstein flooded the news, suggesting his history of sexual harassment and assault dated back to at... |
2018 |
Yes |
| |
I. Investigations and Police Practices |
47 Georgetown Law Journal Annual Review of Criminal Procedure 3 (2018) |
The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution governs all searches and seizures conducted by government agents. The Amendment contains two separate clauses: (1) a prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures, and (2) a requirement that probable cause supports each warrant that is issued. Strictly speaking, the Amendment requires; Search Snippet: ...Forty-Seventh Annual Review of Criminal Procedure I. INVESTIGATIONS AND POLICE PRACTICES Copyright © 2018 by Georgetown University and The Georgetown Law... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Andrew Guthrie Ferguson |
Illuminating Black Data Policing |
15 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 503 (Spring, 2018) |
The future of policing will be driven by data. Crime, criminals, and patterns of criminal activity will be reduced to data to be studied, crunched, and predicted. Police departments across the United States--like the civilian population--will learn to adapt to ever-shifting technological innovations and efficiencies. The question of adoption is not... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Melba Joyce Boyd |
In Hot Pursuit: the Deadly Consequences of Detroit Police Oppression |
18 Journal of Law in Society 179 (Fall, 2018) |
The spark that set off the 1967 Rebellion on July 28, 1967 in Detroit was the result of another moment of police terrorism. Ironically, an occasion to celebrate the homecoming of two Vietnam War veterans, who happened to be African American, erupted into a domestic conflict when the police inflicted excessive and unnecessary force during arrests at; Search Snippet: ...Really Happened IN HOT PURSUIT: THE DEADLY CONSEQUENCES OF DETROIT POLICE OPPRESSION Melba Joyce Boyd [FNd1] Copyright © 2020 by Wayne State... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Gregory DeAngelo , R Kaj Gittings , Anita Alves Pena |
Interracial Face-to-face Crimes and the Socioeconomics of Neighborhoods: Evidence from Policing Records |
56 International Review of Law & Economics Econ. 1 (December, 2018) |
Article history: Received 4 May 2018 Accepted 8 May 2018 Available online 22 May 2018 JEL classification: K4 J1 R3 I3 Keywords: Victimization Inequality Race Ethnicity and social distance Using a novel data set comprising the universe of reported crimes to the Los Angeles Police Department from 2000 to 2007, we examine race victimization patterns... |
2018 |
Yes |
| Gregory DeAngelo , R Kaj Gittings , Anita Alves Pena |
Interracial Face-to-face Crimes and the Socioeconomics of Neighborhoods: Evidence from Policing Records |
56 International Review of Law & Economics 1 (December, 2018) |
Article history: Received 4 May 2018 Accepted 8 May 2018 Available online 22 May 2018 JEL classification: K4 J1 R3 I3 Keywords: Victimization Inequality Race Ethnicity and social distance Using a novel data set comprising the universe of reported crimes to the Los Angeles Police Department from 2000 to 2007, we examine race victimization patterns; Search Snippet: ...TO-FACE CRIMES AND THE SOCIOECONOMICS OF NEIGHBORHOODS: EVIDENCE FROM POLICING RECORDS Gregory DeAngelo [FNa] [FNa1] R Kaj Gittings [FNb] Anita... |
2018 |
Yes |