Saint Louis University Public Law Review
A New Era for Plea Bargaining and Sentencing?: The Aftermath of Padilla v. Kentucky (Volume XXXI, No. 1)
Prefatory Matter
Foreword
Introduction
Introduction
Lynn S. Branham
Articles
Penalty and Proportionality in Deportation for Crimes
Maureen Sweeney and Hillary Scholten
Transporting Padilla to Deportation Proceedings: A Due Process Right to the Effective Assistance of Counsel
Stephen H. Legomsky
Taking Plea Bargaining Seriously: Reforming Pre-Sentence Reports After Padilla v. Kentucky
Gabriel J. Chin
The Myth of the Fully Informed Rational Actor
Stephanos Bibas
Collateral Consequences After Padilla v. Kentucky: From Punishment to Regulation
Margaret Colgate Love
A Prosecutor’s Expanded Responsibilities Under Padilla
Robert M. A. Johnson
The Implications of Padilla v. Kentucky on Practice in United States District Courts
Judge Robert Pratt
Incorporating Collateral Consequences into Sentencing Guidelines and Recommendations Post-Padilla
Michael A. Wolff