Mandatory Minimums

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Minimal Success: The Consequences of Mandatory Minimums in Youth Sentencing

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“In New York State, children as young as thirteen can be processed as adults and sentenced to mandatory minimum sentences.  Mandatory minimum sentences require judges to sentence the defendant to a statutorily set minimum term of imprisonment.  Practitioners, judges, and researchers question the efficacy of mandatory minimum sentences, finding that they are ineffective at deterring…

A Path Toward Race-Conscious Standards for Youth: Translating Adultification Bias Theory into Doctrinal Interventions in Criminal Court

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Abstract:   “This article demonstrates how advocates can leverage empirical literature regarding adultification bias to craft doctrinal interventions that recognize and remedy the disproportionately harsh treatment of Black youth in the juvenile and adult criminal legal system. Through case examples, all of which I litigated in the Civil Rights Clinic at Seattle University School of Law, I demonstrate how adultification…

State v. Lyle, 854 N.W.2d 378 (Iowa Sup. Ct. 2014)

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The Iowa Supreme Court struck down mandatory minimum sentencing schemes as applied to a young person transferred to adult court, finding mandatory minimum sentences to be in violation of federal and state prohibitions against cruel and unusual punishment and the best interest clause in Iowa’s juvenile code. The court notes “the statutory recognition of the…