Constrained Waiver of Trial Rights? Incentives to Plead Guilty and the Right to a Fair Trial

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Abstract

This article develops an interpretative framework to examine when incentives to plead guilty should be found to constrain defendant choice to waive fair trial rights under the European Convention on Human Rights. This framework is informed by existing jurisprudence, specifically the judgments of the European Court of Human Rights in Natsvlishvili and Togonidze v. Georgia and Deweer v. Belgium, and socio-legal literature. According to the framework, an incentive to plead guilty should be found to violate fair trial rights where it makes it unreasonable to expect defendants to exercise their right to a full trial, is independent of the projected outcome at trial, and causes the defendant to plead guilty. An empirical analysis of guilty-plea practice in England and Wales informed by this new framework identifies problematic incentives and suggests such incentives may disproportionately influence vulnerable defendants.

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Helm, R. K. (2019). Constrained Waiver of Trial Rights? Incentives to Plead Guilty and the Right to a Fair Trial. Journal of Law and Society, 46(3), 423–447. https://doi.org/10.1111/jols.12169

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