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- Title
Conviction by Consent? Vulnerability, Autonomy and Conviction by Guilty Plea.
- Authors
Helm, Rebecca K
- Abstract
A criminal conviction resulting from a guilty plea rather than a full trial is typically justified on the basis that the defendant had the ability to go to trial but instead chose to admit guilt in exchange for a small sentence reduction. In other words, the conviction, and associated waiver of rights, occurred by consent. In this article, I challenge that notion by drawing on psycho-legal research on vulnerability and consent and research on guilty pleas in the USA. I suggest that while plea procedure in England and Wales appears less coercive than the practice of 'plea bargaining' in the United States, aspects of the system are highly problematic and are likely to be leading to non-consensual guilty pleas, through which innocent defendants are pleading guilty.
- Subjects
CRIMINAL procedure; GUILTY pleas; PLEA bargaining; COVENANTS not to sue; TRIALS (Law)
- Publication
Journal of Criminal Law, 2019, Vol 83, Issue 2, p161
- ISSN
0022-0183
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/0022018318822223