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Faculty Profiles
George Thomas
Education:
J.S.D., Washington University
LL.M., Washington University
J.D., Iowa
M.F.A., Iowa
B.S., Tennessee
Courses:
Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Criminal Adjudication, Trusts and Estates
Contact:
Links:
Professor Thomas’s SSRN page

Faculty Profile (Back to Menu)

George C. Thomas III

Board of Governors Professor of Law and Judge Alexander P. Waugh, Sr. Distinguished Scholar
(on leave Fall 2009

Professor Thomas has a B.S. from the University of Tennessee, an M.F.A. (creative writing) and J.D. from the University of Iowa, and an LL.M. and J.S.D. from Washington University in St. Louis. Prior to joining the Rutgers faculty in 1986, he practiced law in Tennessee and was a member of the University of Tennessee faculty. Professor Thomas has published to date two scholarly books and more than 60 articles on various aspects of criminal law and criminal procedure. Double Jeopardy: The History, the Law was published by NYU Press and The Miranda Debate, co-authored with Richard A. Leo, was published by Northeastern University Press. Some placements for his articles include the law reviews of Michigan, Virginia, Texas, UCLA, NYU, California, Illinois, Ohio State, USC, and Northwestern. His casebook, Criminal Procedure: Cases, Principles and Policies, published by West Group and co-authored by Joshua Dressler, is widely used.

His latest book, The Supreme Court on Trial: How the American Justice System Sacrifices Innocent Defendants, University of Michigan Press, presents a history of Western cultures sorting the guilty from the innocent, as well as an examination of the criminal procedure of France and a series of recommendations for decreasing the likelihood of wrongful convictions in the American justice systems. His current book project is the history and future of the law of confessions, co-authored with Richard A. Leo, to be published by Oxford University Press.

He enjoys gardening, jogging, reading fiction, and working on novels that he never finishes.