The Forgotten Jurisprudence of Parole and State Constitutional Doctrines of Vagueness

71 Pages Posted: 18 Oct 2023

See all articles by Kristen Bell

Kristen Bell

University of Oregon School of Law

Date Written: September 22, 2023

Abstract

The majority of carceral sentences in the United States include the possibility of discretionary release on parole. Most such sentences, however, are unconstitutionally vague. Their unconstitutionality has gone unnoticed because contemporary scholarship and litigation about vague laws have focused on the U.S. Constitution in lieu of state constitutions. This Article unearths historic state court decisions holding that sentences that end through the discretionary judgment of a parole board are “void for uncertainty.” Although state void for uncertainty doctrines share some similarity with the federal vagueness doctrine, they are far more demanding as applied to criminal punishment. By urging revival of the void for uncertainty doctrine, this Article outlines a novel path for state constitutional litigation and proposes how state legislatures can reform parole statutes to put them on sound constitutional footing.

Keywords: criminal law, state constitutional law, parole, punishment, vagueness, life sentences

Suggested Citation

Bell, Kristen, The Forgotten Jurisprudence of Parole and State Constitutional Doctrines of Vagueness (September 22, 2023). Cardozo Law Review, Vol. 44, No. 5, 2023, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4579514

Kristen Bell (Contact Author)

University of Oregon School of Law ( email )

1515 Agate Street
Eugene, OR Oregon 97403
United States

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