OPINION: 24 Words & One State: The Future of Women’s Equality is in the Hands of Virginians

By: Sam Galina, Staff Editor 24 words is all it takes to formally recognize equality for men and women in America. Somehow, it’s been 232 years and women are still waiting.[1]  The text of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment simply reads, “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.” … Continue reading OPINION: 24 Words & One State: The Future of Women’s Equality is in the Hands of Virginians

Diversion: Not Just for Speeding Tickets

By Carly R. Wright, Staff Editor   Last year, the New York Times published a Princeton University study on eviction rates in the U.S. that revealed something troubling: The City of Richmond had the second highest eviction rate in the country.[1] In 2016, one in nine Richmond families were evicted through legal action and one in five were threatened with eviction.[2] Moreover, over 30% of … Continue reading Diversion: Not Just for Speeding Tickets

Safe Injection Sites: An Attempt to Bring Drug Users out of the Shadows and into Treatment

By: Mike Stehlin, Staff Editor Some called it El Campamento.[I] Used syringes were discarded, stacked on top of each other, and strewn about on the ground, a metaphor of the dead bodies that the drugs left in their wake. The “residents” of the encampment typically included 75 to 125 drug addicts at any one time.[ii] If one was looking for an image to capture the … Continue reading Safe Injection Sites: An Attempt to Bring Drug Users out of the Shadows and into Treatment

Prosecutors Prioritized Over Defenders: The Criminal Justice Pay Gap

By: James William Rosson, Staff Editor A pressing issue exists in regard to the quality of indigent defense in America: the pay disparity between public defender and prosecutor offices. This pay discrepancy goes beyond the tax statements of individual lawyers. It affects the ability of public defender offices to recruit quality attorneys, manage their caseloads, and provide the caliber of representation promised by the U.S. … Continue reading Prosecutors Prioritized Over Defenders: The Criminal Justice Pay Gap

Child-Abuse: A Miller Factor of Redeemability

By: Rebecca Shultz, Senior Staff What does society make of a young sniper? Lee Boyd Malvo was seventeen years-old when he and his father figure drove around Washington, D.C., shooting innocent victims from the back of a van.[1] In 2002, Malvo and an older man killed ten people and injured three, seemingly at random, terrorizing the Washington, D.C. area.[2] The older man, John Muhammad, now … Continue reading Child-Abuse: A Miller Factor of Redeemability

Differences in the Court’s Composition Between Hellerstadt and June Medical Services, and Why it Matters

By: Marina Batalias, Senior Manuscript Editor On Friday October 4, 2019, the Supreme Court of the United States granted certiorari to June Medical Services LLC v. Gee, appealed from the Fifth Circuit.[1]  The case involves a Louisiana law that requires physicians who perform abortions to have admitting privileges at a local hospital.  Eagle-eyed Court-watchers may be experiencing déjà vu- hasn’t the Court already decided this … Continue reading Differences in the Court’s Composition Between Hellerstadt and June Medical Services, and Why it Matters

Not Seeing Eye to Eye When Taking an Eye for an Eye

By Jacob Alexander, Staff Editor. How, whom, and why our government punishes speaks a great deal about the values of our society.[1]It is an outward display of our society’s sense of justice, morality, responsibility, and accountability–and an insight into our humanity.[2]It comes as no surprise, then, that there are both staunch opponents and proponents of the death penalty. The Supreme Court of the United States … Continue reading Not Seeing Eye to Eye When Taking an Eye for an Eye

Reminder: Restorative Justice PILR Symposium This Friday!

PILR is hosting a free 6 MCLE credit Symposium on Restorative Justice this Friday, October 4th, from 9:00 am to 3:45 pm. at University of Richmond’s School of Law in the Moot Court room. The Symposium will include sessions on “What is Restorative Justice,” Race, Gender, and Restorative Justice” with Keynote Speaker Johanna Turner from the Zehr Institute for Restorative Justice, “A Proposal For Restorative … Continue reading Reminder: Restorative Justice PILR Symposium This Friday!

The American Dream: New Public Charge Regulation Information

By: Brianne Donovan, Staff Editor.   Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door.[1]   Since 1903, this poem by Emma Lazarus has been engraved in the interior of Lady Liberty’s pedestal.[2]In the subsequent century her words have … Continue reading The American Dream: New Public Charge Regulation Information

Virginia Practitioners Stepping Away from the Cash Bail System

By: Julia Ziegler, Staff Editor A defendant sat in a courtroom in Richmond, Virginia last month at his bail hearing while counsel for both the government and the defendant argued to the Judge he should be released to his home rather than remaining in custody or paying for his freedom while he waited for his case to move forward. The judge expressed concern that the defendant … Continue reading Virginia Practitioners Stepping Away from the Cash Bail System