
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Over a 35-year career at the Department of Justice, Jonathan Wroblewski, JD ’86, watched the country’s stance on criminal sentencing harden, soften, recalibrate, and shift again. One of his early cases at the DOJ, which involved a cross-burning in rural Georgia, sparked a fascination with sentencing policy that shaped the rest of his career. Today, he is one of the country’s leading experts on sentencing law and policy.
In this episode of Stanford Legal, host Professor Pamela Karlan talks with Wroblewski about crime and punishment, including the evolution of modern sentencing policies. Wroblewski, who has been serving as a visiting instructor at Stanford Law teaching courses on sentencing and AI in criminal justice, also offers a look inside his long career at the DOJ, where Karlan also served two separate stints as a political appointee.
The conversation moves between how crime waves shape public attitudes, why some sentencing reforms take hold while others stall, and what happens inside the DOJ when long-standing norms begin to erode. Wroblewski’s stories, drawn from decades of work across administrations, bring those shifts into sharper focus.
Links:
Connect:
(00:00) Intro to Jonathan Wroblewski’s Career
(05:01) Evolution of Sentencing Policies
(15:01) Shifts in Sentencing Philosophies
(25:01) Public Perception and Crime Rates
(35:01) Future Perspectives for Fair and Effective Legal Practices
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
By Stanford Law School4.3
4343 ratings
Over a 35-year career at the Department of Justice, Jonathan Wroblewski, JD ’86, watched the country’s stance on criminal sentencing harden, soften, recalibrate, and shift again. One of his early cases at the DOJ, which involved a cross-burning in rural Georgia, sparked a fascination with sentencing policy that shaped the rest of his career. Today, he is one of the country’s leading experts on sentencing law and policy.
In this episode of Stanford Legal, host Professor Pamela Karlan talks with Wroblewski about crime and punishment, including the evolution of modern sentencing policies. Wroblewski, who has been serving as a visiting instructor at Stanford Law teaching courses on sentencing and AI in criminal justice, also offers a look inside his long career at the DOJ, where Karlan also served two separate stints as a political appointee.
The conversation moves between how crime waves shape public attitudes, why some sentencing reforms take hold while others stall, and what happens inside the DOJ when long-standing norms begin to erode. Wroblewski’s stories, drawn from decades of work across administrations, bring those shifts into sharper focus.
Links:
Connect:
(00:00) Intro to Jonathan Wroblewski’s Career
(05:01) Evolution of Sentencing Policies
(15:01) Shifts in Sentencing Philosophies
(25:01) Public Perception and Crime Rates
(35:01) Future Perspectives for Fair and Effective Legal Practices
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

32,254 Listeners

6,786 Listeners

4,085 Listeners

3,542 Listeners

381 Listeners

1,113 Listeners

6,300 Listeners

113,049 Listeners

2,385 Listeners

32,398 Listeners

7,281 Listeners

5,547 Listeners

16,317 Listeners

744 Listeners

147 Listeners

628 Listeners