2 minute read
Wayne A. Logan
Steven M. Goldstein Professor
J.D., UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN, 1991 M.A., CRIMINOLOGY, STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK, ALBANY, 1986 B.A., WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY, 1983
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Sentencing Law, Policy & Practice (with Michael O’Hear) (Foundation Press) (forthcoming 2022)
The Ex Post Facto Clause: Its History and Role in A Punitive Society (Oxford University Press) (forthcoming 2022)
Sex Offender Registration and Community Notification Laws: An Empirical Evaluation (co-editor with J.J. Prescott) (Cambridge University Press 2021)
Collateral Consequences of Criminal Conviction: Law, Policy and Practice (with Margaret Love & Jenny Roberts) (4th ed., Thomson Reuters 2021)
Questions and Answers, Q & A: Criminal Procedure-Police Investigation (4th ed., Carolina Academic Press 2021)
Questions and Answers, Q & A: Criminal Procedure-Adjudication (4th ed., Carolina Academic Press 2021)
Florida Search and Seizure Law (LexisNexis 2020 & 2021)
Collateral Consequences of Criminal Conviction: Law, Policy and Practice (with Margaret Love & Jenny Roberts) (3d ed., Thomson Reuters 2018)
Professor Wayne Logan describes the use of crowdsourcing techniques in criminal investigations, of late undertaken by police working alongside amateur web and forensic genetic sleuths, armchair detectives and others seeking to identify and apprehend criminal suspects. The article discusses how current doctrine is illequipped to address this development and provides a framework for its regulation, in the hope of ensuring that the wisdom of the crowd does not become the tyranny of the crowd.
Criminal Procedure: The Post-Investigative Process (with Stanley Adelman et al.) (5th ed., Carolina Academic Press 2018)
Origins and Evolution of SORN Laws, in Sex Offender Registration and Community Notification Laws: An Empirical Evaluation (co-editor with J.J. Prescott) (Cambridge University Press 2021)
Community-based Approaches to Sex Offender Management, in What Works with Sexual Offenders: Contemporary Perspectives in Theory, Assessment, Treatment and Prevention (Jean Proulx et al., editors) (Wiley-Blackwell 2020)
Geography and Reasonable Suspicion in Auto Stops, 48 N. Ky. L. Rev. _ (forthcoming 2022)
Sex Offender Registration in a Pandemic, 19 Ohio St. J. Crim. L. _ (forthcoming 2021)
Crowdsourcing Crime Control, 99 Texas L. Rev. 137 (2020)
The Case for Greater Transparency in Sixth Amendment Pretrial Right to Counsel Warnings, 52 Tex. Tech L. Rev. 23 (2019)
Gundy v. United States: Gunning for the Administrative State, 17 Ohio St. J. Crim. L. 185 (2019)
Indiana v. Timbs: Toward the Regulation of Mercenary Criminal Justice, 32 Fed. Sent. Rep. 3 (2019)
Contracting for Fourth Amendment Privacy Online (with Jake Linford), 104 Minn. L. Rev. 101 (2019)
Policing Police Access to Criminal Justice Data, 104 Iowa L. Rev. 619 (2019)
What the Feds Can Do to Rein in Local Mercenary Criminal Justice, 2019 U. Ill. L. Rev. 1731 (2019)
Fourth Amendment Localism, 93 Ind. L.J. 369 (2018)
Challenging the Punitiveness of “New Generation” SORN Laws, 21 New Crim. L. Rev. 426 (2018)
False Massiah: The Sixth Amendment Revolution That Wasn’t, 50 Tex. Tech L. Rev. 153 (2018)