25 research outputs found

    Military Justice: The Oxymoron of the 1980\u27s

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    It\u27s Time to Put the Military\u27s Death Penalty to Sleep

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    Part I will focus on the death penalty in the civilian sector of the United States. It begins with a brief history of and an introduction to death penalty laws in the United States. A critical examination of the primary arguments used to justify the death penalty follows. Part I next offers a brief overview of other independent reasons for the abolition of the death penalty. After having concluded that the application of the death penalty is unfair in the civilian sector and should thus be abolished, the article will then shift its focus to the death penalty in the military sector. The nexus in arguing that the death penalty should be abolished in the civilian sector and then in the military sector is both simple and logical: if the administration of the death penalty in the civilian sector is unfair and unjust, it is even more so in the military sector because of its inherent unfairness. Part II of the article will first provide a brief synopsis of the military courtmartial system and will then highlight the major differences between the military and civilian justice systems. These major differences will lead to the inevitable conclusion that the military justice system is inherently unfair and therefore leaves no room for possible mistakes when the life of a service member is at stake. Because the military system is innately unfair, this article recommends that Congress abolish the death penalty in the military

    Gardner: The Unlawful Concert

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    Secured Transactions

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    Filing Nationwide Perfectly or Get with the Trend

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    In the shadow of the looming year 2000, the Uniform Commercial Code ( U.C.C. ) and its filing system, with its independent and varied offices all over the United States, was a system which had not taken advantage of the modern technology available, and thus had failed to keep pace with the rest of society\u27s institutions. It was the author\u27s view that all of the then-present filing systems should have been brought into the 21st century by merging them into a single, unified, central, national U.C.C. filing system. The article begins by discussing different types of filing systems, then focuses on the Illinois systems, before moving on to the problems derived from the current filing system. Finally, the author proposed the solution of creating a single, uniform, national filing system

    Filing Nationwide Perfectly or Get with the Trend

    Get PDF
    In the shadow of the looming year 2000, the Uniform Commercial Code ( U.C.C. ) and its filing system, with its independent and varied offices all over the United States, was a system which had not taken advantage of the modern technology available, and thus had failed to keep pace with the rest of society\u27s institutions. It was the author\u27s view that all of the then-present filing systems should have been brought into the 21st century by merging them into a single, unified, central, national U.C.C. filing system. The article begins by discussing different types of filing systems, then focuses on the Illinois systems, before moving on to the problems derived from the current filing system. Finally, the author proposed the solution of creating a single, uniform, national filing system

    It\u27s Time to Put the Military\u27s Death Penalty to Sleep

    Get PDF
    Part I will focus on the death penalty in the civilian sector of the United States. It begins with a brief history of and an introduction to death penalty laws in the United States. A critical examination of the primary arguments used to justify the death penalty follows. Part I next offers a brief overview of other independent reasons for the abolition of the death penalty. After having concluded that the application of the death penalty is unfair in the civilian sector and should thus be abolished, the article will then shift its focus to the death penalty in the military sector. The nexus in arguing that the death penalty should be abolished in the civilian sector and then in the military sector is both simple and logical: if the administration of the death penalty in the civilian sector is unfair and unjust, it is even more so in the military sector because of its inherent unfairness. Part II of the article will first provide a brief synopsis of the military courtmartial system and will then highlight the major differences between the military and civilian justice systems. These major differences will lead to the inevitable conclusion that the military justice system is inherently unfair and therefore leaves no room for possible mistakes when the life of a service member is at stake. Because the military system is innately unfair, this article recommends that Congress abolish the death penalty in the military
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