Double Jeopardy . . .

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Law review article:

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“Deadlocked-Jury Mistrials, Lesser Included Offenses, and Double Jeopardy: A Proposal to Strengthen the Manifest Necessity Requirement,” by John L. Hodge, Criminal Justice Journal, Fall 1986 (Vol. 9, No. 1), pp. 9 – 44.

This article explains why the majority view of double jeopardy should be broadened so that, when a jury has decided that a defendant is not guilty of the main offense and is “hung” on the lesser-included offenses, that the defendant may not be retried on the main offense.

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“Deadlocked-Jury Mistrials, Lesser Included Offenses, and Double Jeopardy: A Proposal to Strengthen the Manifest Necessity Requirement,” by John L. Hodge, Criminal Justice Journal, Fall 1986 (Vol. 9, No. 1), pp. 9 – 44.
This article explains why the majority view of double jeopardy should be broadened so that, when a jury has decided that a defendant is not guilty of the main offense and is “hung” on the lesser-included offenses, that the defendant may not be retried on the main offense.