Mr. Morgan E. Scott

Mr. Morgan E. Scott
Teaching Associate
Public Affairs

E-mail: mscott@roanoke.edu
Office:
Francis T. West Hall 223
Office Phone: 540-375-2228

B.A. University of Arizona
J.D. College of William and Mary
Assistant Commonwealths Attorney, Senior Litigation Counsel
First Assistant U.S. Attorney
United States Attorney
Clerk of United States District Court Western District of Virginia
Private practice, Woods, Rogers PLC. of Counsel


211 Criminal Justice

An introductory analysis of the criminal justice system in the United States, its structure, processes, and problems. (1)
Lecture: 3 hrs/wk. (Cross-listed as Political Science 211).

Prerequisite: Political Science 101 or permission.

Fall 2007 Syllabus


213 Criminal Law

A study of the criminal justice system at work in the courtroom setting, emphasizing the relationship between substantive criminal law, criminal procedure, and the rules of evidence. (1)

Lecture: 3 hrs/wk.

Prerequisite: Once course in criminal justice (Political Science 101 or 211 or Sociology 238 or 334).

Fall 2007 Syllabus


214 The Judicial Process


214 The Judicial Process

214 The Judicial Process
An exploration of the politics of the American judicial system. This includes such topics as the structure of courts, selection of judges, actors who participate in the judiciary, judicial behavior, and the civil and criminal varieties of courts. (1)

Lecture: 3hrs/wk

Prerequisite: Political Science 101 or permission

Spring 2007 Syllabus


261 Criminal Procedure

Criminal Procedure is a critical review of the application of Constitutional restraints , Rules of Procedure and other aspects of criminal cases from initiation to post conviction . It involves the text case analysis of major Supreme Court Criminal procedure rulings. (1)

Lecture: 3 hrs/wk.

Fall 2007 Syllabus


325 Comparative Law Enforcement
A comprehensive overview of law enforcement using a comparative perspective. The development, mission, organization, and management of law enforcement agencies will be examined. The U.S. system will be analyzed and compared to those of the United Kingdom, France, and Japan. (1)

Lecture: 3 hrs/wk.

Prerequisite: Sociology 101 and Political Science 101.

Fall 2006 Syllabus

Pre-Law Advising