2021 Bar Convention Criminal Law Section Out of Stock
Product Details
Thank you to our South Carolina Bar Convention Sponsor!
About the Seminar
This seminar will consist of a panel discussion and two presentations. The panel will discuss the impact of the trial penalty on an accused person’s decision to plead guilty rather than face a much more severe punishment if they go to trial. Rauch Wise will discuss the status of the common scheme or plan exception to Rule 404(b) of the South Carolina Rules of Evidence by examining the Supreme Court’s opinions in State v. Wallace, State v. Perry, State v. Durant, and State v. Cotton. Amie Clifford will conclude the program with a comprehensive overview of new cases and legislation that impacts the criminal law.
Seminar Agenda
Panel
Discussion: The Trial Penalty?
The Honorable Joseph F. Anderson - United States District Judge, US District Court, District of South Carolina
Christopher W. Adams - Adams & Bishoff
Stephanie Smart Gittings - Fourteenth Circuit Public Defender
Barry J. Pollack - Robbins Russell
Peter McCoy - United States Attorney, District of South Carolina
Scarlett Wilson - Ninth Circuit Solicitor
Wallace is Dead! Long Live Wallace! Impact of Perry, Durant and Cotton
C. Rauch Wise
2020 Legal Update for State Judges and Criminal Law Practitioners: The Good, the Bad, the Ugly
Amie L.
Clifford - S.C. Commission on Prosecution Coordination
Course Planners/Moderators:
C. Andrew
Carroll - Carroll Law Firm, LLC
This seminar qualifies for 3.10 MCLE credit hours, including up to 3.10 Criminal credit hours for Magistrates and Municipal Judges.
This is a Basic to Intermediate Level Program.
Note: When submitting your compliance reports to the SC Commission on CLE and Specialization, if you completed this in 2022, please use this course code: 223548ADO.
Note: When submitting your compliance
reports to the SC Commission on CLE and Specialization, if you completed this
in 2023, please use this course code: 231942ADO.
Tags
The South Carolina Bar is an accredited CLE provider in South Carolina only. Attorneys are responsible for seeking their own credit in other jurisdictions.
Disclaimer: The views expressed in CLE programs and publications do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the South Carolina Bar, its sections, or committees. The South Carolina Bar believes that all Bar members have the right to both meaningful learning and to the exchange of ideas in a civil environment. The Bar reserves the right to remove or exclude any person from a Bar event if that person is causing inappropriate disturbance, behaving in a manner inconsistent with accepted standards of decorum, or in any way preventing fellow Bar members from meaningful participation and learning.