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

Dissecting Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District: Should Heightened Scrutiny Apply to Monetary Exactions?

By: Lizzy Ritchie, Editor-In-Chief The Fifth Amendment Takings Clause of the United States Constitution prohibits the government from taking private property for public use, without paying the property owner just compensation.[1] So long as the government provides just compensation, it is authorized to exercise its eminent domain power pursuant to the public health, safety, morals, or welfare.[2] The Supreme Court of the United States has … Continue reading Dissecting Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District: Should Heightened Scrutiny Apply to Monetary Exactions?

Virginia’s Response to Teens’ Juuling Addiction

By: M. Randell Scism We all know somebody who has a Juul, or some other type of alternative nicotine product. Sometimes, this person is trying to quit smoking traditional cigarettes. The goal of e-cigarettes is to get people who are addicted to cigarettes to switch to e-cigarettes without enticing non-smokers to try them.[1]This is a difficult task, as there is a rapid growth in the … Continue reading Virginia’s Response to Teens’ Juuling Addiction

The “Right” Side of Justice: A Personal Reflection Upon the Differences Between Practicing Criminal Law in Virginia and Massachusetts

  By: Erica Rebussini, Notes and Comments Editor Over the past two summers I’ve had criminal law internships in Virginia and Massachusetts, respectively. After these experiences, I can’t help but question some of the disparities I witnessed in those systems. Broadly speaking, the differences between these criminal court cultures are palpable in both the substantive application of the law as well as practical nuances inherent … Continue reading The “Right” Side of Justice: A Personal Reflection Upon the Differences Between Practicing Criminal Law in Virginia and Massachusetts

We Always Have a Choice: From the Chinese Exclusion Act to the Muslim Travel Ban

Editors note: this piece was originally written and intended to be published in April of 2019.  By: Christopher An The over simplified mantra of “We have no choice. We have no choice. We have no choice.” were spoken in response to a rally in which then republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump announced the need for a “total and complete” ban on Muslims entering in the … Continue reading We Always Have a Choice: From the Chinese Exclusion Act to the Muslim Travel Ban

Female Soldiers’ Health at Risk Under Current Military Practices

By: Halley Taylor Though women have served in the United States military in various capacities for more than a century[1], military officials and military doctors have failed in large part to adapt their practices and attitudes, causing women to suffer serious health problems with effects impacting both their military and civilian lives for years.[2] Women serving in the military today put their lives on the … Continue reading Female Soldiers’ Health at Risk Under Current Military Practices

Reparations Emerging as a Viable Option in Fighting the Racial Wealth Gap

By: Aishaah R. Reed With the 2020 presidential election looming a little more than a year away, many candidates are focusing on the economy. For Democratic candidates, there is a conscious effort to level the economic scales to ensure economic security for all Americans.[1] This has been witnessed in a number of areas including calls for tuition-free higher education, universal childcare, and Medicare for all.[2] … Continue reading Reparations Emerging as a Viable Option in Fighting the Racial Wealth Gap

Appoint Public Defenders to Federal and State Courts

By: Pete Johnson Every public defender—whether  young or seasoned—knows the story of Clarence Earl Gideon, an indigent Florida defendant who hand-wrote a note to America’s highest court declaring that he had a right to an attorney.[1] Gideon’s inspirational story led to the landmark Supreme Court decision of Gideon v. Wainwright, in which the Court ruled that Gideon’s 6th Amendment constitutional rights were violated when he … Continue reading Appoint Public Defenders to Federal and State Courts