America Criminalizes Too Much and Punishes Too Much
When those on parole or probation are included, one out of every 47 adults is under “some form of correctional supervision.”
When those on parole or probation are included, one out of every 47 adults is under “some form of correctional supervision.”
The president's decision to drop out after insisting he never would continued a pattern established by a long career of politically convenient reversals.
An analysis by The Washington Post found that nearly 1,800 police officers were arrested for child sex abuse-related crimes between 2005 and 2022.
The president's son, who faces up to 25 years in prison for conduct that violated no one's rights, can still challenge his prosecution on Second Amendment grounds.
The Justice Department announced last year that it would expand a program to grant compassionate relief to federal inmates who've been sexually assaulted by staff.
The former and possibly future president hopes voters will overlook his incoherence.
Since he favors aggressive drug law enforcement, severe penalties, and impunity for abusive police officers, he may have trouble persuading black voters that he is on their side.
Lee announced in 2021 that he was fast-tracking clemency petitions for inmates serving mandatory minimums that had since been repealed. Earlier this year, he scrapped the program with applications still pending.
The little-known but outrageous practice allowed judges to enhance defendants' sentences using conduct a jury acquitted them of.
Charlie Lynch’s ordeal is a vivid reminder of a senseless prohibition policy that persists thanks to political inertia.
Criminal justice advocates say the evidence doesn't back up Republicans' claims that Louisiana's landmark 2017 reforms are to blame for violent crime.
Judges can sentence defendants for charges they were acquitted of by a jury, a practice that troubles criminal justice advocates, civil liberties groups, and several Supreme Court justices.
Prosecutors have enormous power to coerce guilty pleas, which are the basis for nearly all convictions.
The Supreme Court mulls how to apply a mandatory minimum for gun possession by people convicted of drug felonies.
Florida's mandatory minimum sentences created a large, elderly prison population. Now the bill is coming due.
Deja Taylor is going to federal prison because of a constitutionally dubious gun law that millions of cannabis consumers are violating right now.
My new co-authored article reviews 168 victim impact statements from the Larry Nassar sentencing hearing and concludes that these statements show a victim voice at sentencing can improve justice.
Individuals are waiting months to have their criminal records expunged after court orders, according to a new lawsuit.
Prosecutors asked for longer prison sentences at trial and now seem to be trying again.
The collapse of his plea deal set up a clash with his father, who doggedly defends the firearm regulations his son violated.
The case is just one example of miscalculations that routinely keep Louisiana prisoners behind bars after they complete their sentences.
The state has filed a motion to set an execution date for Kenneth Eugene Smith, who survived a previous execution attempt.
Special Counsel David Weiss will face a Second Amendment challenge if he prosecutes the president's son for illegally buying a firearm.
Violators are rarely caught, while the unlucky few who face prosecution can go to prison for years.
The former Minneapolis officer's 57-month sentence is based largely on the premise that he was "in the best position" to save Floyd.
The nature of their conduct is a better indicator of the punishment they deserve.
Plus: A listener question concerning drug decriminalization and social well-being
A federal judge objected to two aspects of the agreement that seemed designed to shield Biden from the possibility that his father will lose reelection next year.
A judge's questions about his plea deal should not obscure the point that the law he broke is unjust and arguably unconstitutional.
Donald Trump commuted Philip Esformes' sentence, but the Justice Department is bent on sending him back to prison.
At a recent congressional hearing, Republicans and Democrats sparred over clemency. But they share more common ground than they'd like to admit.
His bloody rhetoric undermines his defense of the sentencing reforms he proudly embraced as president.
Plus: A listener question cross-examines prior Reason Roundtable discussions surrounding immigration, economic growth, and birthrates.
DeSantis calls the bill a "jailbreak," a gross misrepresentation of the criminal justice reform bill.
It remains unclear whether the Oath Keepers leader had a specific plan to violently disrupt the electoral vote count on January 6.
A Reason investigation earlier this year detailed the case of a Minnesota woman who was sentenced to 40 years on probation for a drug crime.
A House-approved bill that the president supports would expand the draconian penalties he supposedly wants to abolish.
On Monday, the Supreme Court sided with an Alabama death-row inmate who, after surviving a botched lethal injection attempt last year, says he wants to die by gas chamber instead.
A pilot proposal to levy civil fines based on income is being considered by the City Council.
Two damning investigations and a request from the state attorney general haven't been enough to stop the execution.
The legislation, whose authors say two-fifths of prisoners are locked up without a "compelling public safety justification," would reward states that take a more discriminating approach.
Trump touted his support for sentencing reform as evidence of his "deep compassion," which DeSantis sees as a weakness.
A new report details how plea bargaining can hurt defendants and warps the justice system.
According to the Justice Department's reading of the law, the crime need not involve impersonation or even fraud.
"No one buys this sham of a review," wrote one critic. "And the reason we don't buy it is because we all have functioning brains."
The paper pushes modest reforms while endorsing continued criminalization.
"This is a fundamental statement of morality, of what's right and wrong," Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro said Thursday. "And I believe Pennsylvania must be on the right side of this issue."
Because legislators omitted a crucial letter, there is no straightforward way to downgrade convictions for offenses that are no longer felonies.