February 24, 2020
Prof Kaplan, CJRC in NY Times
In a story about non-unanimous juries, professor Aliza Kaplan and the Criminal Justice Reform Clinic are mentioned for research on how the law affects Oregonians.
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<picture class="lw_image"> <source media="(max-width: 500px)" type="image/webp" srcset="/live/image/gid/10/width/500/82648_aliza_kaplan_speaking.rev.1582576128.webp 1x" data-origin="responsive"/> <source media="(max-width: 500px)" type="image/jpeg" srcset="/live/image/gid/10/width/500/82648_aliza_kaplan_speaking.rev.1582576128.jpg 1x" data-origin="responsive"/> <source media="(min-width: 501px)" type="image/webp" srcset="/live/image/gid/10/width/760/82648_aliza_kaplan_speaking.rev.1582576128.webp 1x" data-origin="responsive"/> <source media="(min-width: 501px)" type="image/jpeg" srcset="/live/image/gid/10/width/760/82648_aliza_kaplan_speaking.rev.1582576128.jpg 1x" data-origin="responsive"/> <img src="/live/image/gid/10/width/760/82648_aliza_kaplan_speaking.rev.1582576128.jpg" alt="Professor Aliza Kaplan" data-max-w="665" data-max-h="1000" loading="lazy" data-optimized="true"/></picture>
The New York Times published a prominent story Sunday February 23, on the issue of non-unanimous juries. Noting the forthcoming decision from the Supreme Court, the story focuses of the impact of the SCOTUS decision in Oregon and notes the work of professor Aliza Kaplan and the Criminal Justice Reform Clinic.
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