58 research outputs found
Limitations on the ability to negotiate justice: Attorney perspectives on guilt, innocence, and legal advice in the current plea system
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this recordIn the American criminal justice system the vast majority of criminal convictions occur as the
result of guilty pleas, often made as a result of plea bargains, rather than jury trials. The
incentives offered in exchange for guilty pleas mean that both innocent and guilty defendants
plead guilty. We investigate the role of attorneys in this context, through interviews with
criminal defense attorneys. We examine defense attorney perspectives on the extent to which
innocent defendants are (and should be) pleading guilty in the current legal framework and their
views of their own role in this complex system. We also use a hypothetical case to probe the
ways in which defense attorneys consider guilt or innocence when providing advice on pleas.
Results indicate that attorney advice is influenced by guilt or innocence, but also that attorneys
are limited in the extent to which they can negotiate justice for their clients in a system in which
uncertainty and large discrepancies between outcomes of guilty pleas and conviction at trial can
make it a sensible option to plead guilty even when innocent. Results also suggest conflicting
opinions over the role of the attorney in the plea-bargaining process
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