This book contains an unorthodox, unusually interesting and highly stimulating account of the Supreme Court's impact on the American criminal justice system. The author's suggestions about weakening the system's intense adversary character include valuable comparisons with other countries in the common law tradition.
Mirjan R. Damaska
Sterling Professor Emeritus of Law, Yale Law School
William Pizzi, long one of the keenest observers of our criminal justice system, has written a book brimming with insights and surprising connections. Anyone wanting to understand the phenomenon of mass incarceration will find here persuasive explanations in corners where others would not have thought to look.
Friedman, Richard D.
Alene and Allan F. Smith Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School
In a lively, thoughtful, and thoroughly original treatment, Professor Pizzi identifies a new culprit responsible for high U.S. incarceration rates: the United States Supreme Court. Pizzi demonstrates that by constitutionalizing vast swathes of criminal procedure, the Court has fuel-injected the system of plea bargaining to the point that it is so efficient, and the incentives of its participants so warped, that no one, including defendants, can any longer take the risks of trial. This Court-induced plea-bargaining-on-steroids is a big reason, maybe the biggest, why so many Americans are incarcerated. Perhaps more significantly, Pizzi shows that the Court's piecemeal forays into process have left state systems little room for the kinds of systemic experiments likely needed to lead us back to reasonable levels of incarceration. This book was a breath of fresh air to everyone who has waited to hear about the cost side of such revered cases as Mapp, Miranda, and even Gideon. How stunning to see in these pages that the costs of those historic constitutional decisions are being borne largely by the very people they were intended to protect.
The Honorable Morris B. Hoffman
Denver District Court Judge
Based on expert analysis of both Supreme Court jurisprudence and the criminal justice systems of other nations, The Role of the Supreme Court in Mass Incarceration offers intriguing and important insights into the causes of perhaps the most significant criminal justice issue of our time. The book's diagnosis and possible treatments will challenge and engage all readers, scholars, policymakers and members of the public alike, who want to bring more justice into the law.
Gabriel J. Chin
Edward L. Barrett Jr. Chair and Martin Luther King Jr. Professor
University of California, Davis School of Law
As William Pizzi shows in this masterful volume, the American system of criminal procedure is like no other. It has been shaped by grand pronouncements of the Supreme Court that appeared to advance the rights of the accused but that, in practice, have produced their antithesis. By rendering decisions without much regard for cost or practicality and without the ability to compromise or adjust to changing circumstances, the Court has made trials so adversarial and so unworkable that they have almost vanished. Harsh leverage now induces defendants to sacrifice their rights, and assembly-line plea bargaining has led to the imprisonment of Americans at a rate unmatched anywhere else in the world. Pizzi's extraordinary knowledge of the procedural systems of other Western democracies as well as our own and his insight and unfailing good sense have produced a powerful indictment of a criminal justice system off the tracks.
Albert Alschuler
Julius Kreeger Professor Emeritus of Law and Criminology
University of Chicago Law School
In his new book, Professor William Pizzi presents a unique and insightful take on the underappreciated causes of a critical public policy issue-Why are so many Americans in prison? In The Supreme Court's Role in Mass Incarceration, Pizzi exposes how many Court decisions that gave the surface of appearance of improving our criminal justice system have, in fact, backfired. Any one with any interest in understanding why we have one of the world's highest incarceration rates-and is willing to entertain ideas that depart from the conventional wisdom-will find much to learn from Pizzi's work.
Paul G. Cassell
Ronald N. Boyce Presidential Professor of Criminal Law and University Distinguished Professor of Law
S.J. Quinney College of Law at the University of Utah
This book contains an unorthodox, unusually interesting and highly stimulating account of the Supreme Court's impact on the American criminal justice system. The author's suggestions about weakening the system's intense adversary character include valuable comparisons with other countries in the common law tradition.
Mirjan R. Damaska, Sterling Professor Emeritus of Law, Yale Law School
William Pizzi, long one of the keenest observers of our criminal justice system, has written a book brimming with insights and surprising connections. Anyone wanting to understand the phenomenon of mass incarceration will find here persuasive explanations in corners where others would not have thought to look.
Richard D. Friedman, Alene and Allan F. Smith Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School
As William Pizzi shows in this masterful volume, the American system of criminal procedure is like no other. It has been shaped by grand pronouncements of the Supreme Court that appeared to advance the rights of the accused but that, in practice, have produced their antithesis. By rendering decisions without much regard for cost or practicality and without the ability to compromise or adjust to changing circumstances, the Court has made trials so adversarial and so unworkable that they have almost vanished. Harsh leverage now induces defendants to sacrifice their rights, and assembly-line plea bargaining has led to the imprisonment of Americans at a rate unmatched anywhere else in the world. Pizzi's extraordinary knowledge of the procedural systems of other Western democracies as well as our own and his insight and unfailing good sense have produced a powerful indictment of a criminal justice system off the tracks.
Albert Alschuler, Julius Kreeger Professor Emeritus of Law and Criminology, University of Chicago Law School
In his new book, Professor William Pizzi presents a unique and insightful take on the underappreciated causes of a critical public policy issue-Why are so many Americans in prison? In The Supreme Court's Role in Mass Incarceration, Pizzi exposes how many Court decisions that gave the surface of appearance of improving our criminal justice system have, in fact, backfired. Anyone with any interest in understanding why we have one of the world's highest incarceration rates-and is willing to entertain ideas that depart from the conventional wisdom-will find much to learn from Pizzi's work.
Paul G. Cassell, Ronald N. Boyce Presidential Professor of Criminal Law and University Distinguished Professor of Law, S.J. Quinney College of Law at the University of Utah
Based on expert analysis of both Supreme Court jurisprudence and the criminal justice systems of other nations, The Supreme Court's Role in Mass Incarceration offers intriguing and important insights into the causes of perhaps the most significant criminal justice issue of our time. The book's diagnosis and possible treatments will challenge and engage all readers, scholars, policymakers and members of the public alike, who want to bring more justice into the law.
Gabriel J. Chin, Edward L. Barrett Jr. Chair and Martin Luther King Jr. Professor, University of California, Davis School of Law
In a lively, thoughtful, and thoroughly original treatment, Professor Pizzi identifies a new culprit responsible for high U.S. incarceration rates: the United States Supreme Court. Pizzi demonstrates that by constitutionalizing vast swathes of criminal procedure, the Court has fuel-injected the system of plea bargaining to the point that it is so efficient, and the incentives of its participants so warped, that no one, including defendants, can any longer take the risks of trial. This Court-induced plea-bargaining-on-steroids is a big reason, maybe the biggest, why so many Americans are incarcerated. Perhaps more significantly, Pizzi shows that the Court's piecemeal forays into process have left state systems little room for the kinds of systemic experiments likely needed to lead us back to reasonable levels of incarceration. This book was a breath of fresh air to everyone who has waited to hear about the cost side of such revered cases as Mapp, Miranda, and even Gideon. How stunning to see in these pages that the costs of those historic constitutional decisions are being borne largely by the very people they were intended to protect.
The Honorable Morris B. Hoffman, Denver District Court Judge