Topic: Criminal Procedure
Associate Professor of Law Juliet Stumpf analyzes illegal immigration case
Juliet Stumpf, associate professor of law, believes that the recent prosecution of 270 illegal immigrants working in a meatpacking plant with false documents was “a startling intensification of the criminalization of immigration law.” The workers have been sentenced to five months in prison, followed by an immediate deportation. Stumpf also discussed these issues on the nationally broadcast radio program “Across the Nation with Bob Dunning,” on Friday, May 30 and was featured in the article “Comienzan a encarcelar a indocumentados” in La Tribuna Hispana USA.
The New York Times (New York, N.Y.) 270 illegal immigrants sent to prison in in federal push
Professor of Law Lansing shares expertise on tort case
Ronald Lansing, professor of law, finds that, in the investigation of the murder of Brooke Wilberger, it is strange that the tort case preceded the criminal case. Lansing states that “there is an urgency that happens more often in a criminal case.”
Corvallis Gazette Times (Corvallis, Ore.) Wilberger lawsuit bogged down
Law Professor John Parry discuss post 9/11 police power
John Parry, professor of law:
In January, Parry gave a speech on the panel “Police Power and Practices Post 9/11: Is The War on Terror Changing Domestic Criminal Law and Procedure?” at the 2008 AALS Annual Meeting in New York City.

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