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« "How Much Do Mandatory Minimums Matter?" | Main | Bureau of Justice Statistics releases "Capital Punishment, 2023 – Statistical Tables" » July 24, 2025 New CCJ report details "Crime Trends in U.S.
« New CCJ report details "Crime Trends in U.S. Cities: Mid-Year 2025 Update" | Main | More details on the BOP's new First Step Act Task Force and its challenges » July 24, 2025 Bureau of Justice ...
The title of this post is the title of this new paper authored by Spencer Cooper now available via SSRN. Here is its abstract: I estimate the causal effect of mandatory minimum (MM) eligibility on ...
Law360 has this lengthy new article providing a detail examination of the Supreme Court's rulings in an array of criminal cases during its October 2024 Term. The article's headline, "High Court Term ...
« Officer convicted of violating Breonna Taylor's civil rights sentenced to 33 months in federal prison | Main | Lots of recent Law360 pieces for summer reading » July 22, 2025 Another mass murderer ...
Supervision failures are still driving incarceration. In 2023, nearly 200,000 people were admitted to prison for violating probation or parole, including over 110,000 people for technical violations.
The title of this post is the title of this new paper authored by Alexandra Natapoff and now available via SSRN. Here is its abstract: ...
A busy summer continues for the US Sentencing Commission. A couple of weeks ago, as detailed here, the Commission conducted a "Public Hearing on Retroactivity" to "gather testimony from invited ...
The explanation may be the sheer volume of different efforts to reduce violence." From Fox News, " America’s crime drop isn’t a coincidence. Trump’s immigration policies are working: New report shows ...
From Rory Little, " Justice Neil Gorsuch’s "right to jury trial' revolution ": ...
This New York Times piece, headlined "N.J. Criminal Cases Screech to a Halt as Habba’s Authority Is Challenged," reports on the still-developing story: Federal court proceedings throughout New Jersey ...
Early in 2022, the pattern reversed, and homicide has been declining in every subsequent year. By the end of 2024, the new data show 20,157 homicides, only about 1,000 more than in 2019, the last full ...