5 canonical passages across 5 cases, quoted by 15 opinions in total. These passages cluster together because the same opinions keep quoting them side by side — they state parts of one doctrine. The anchor passage is from Eddie Hammonds, Jr. v. Lanson Newsome, Warden, Georgia State Prison, Reidsville, Georgia.
| # | Case | Flag | Canonical passage | Citers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Eddie Hammonds, Jr. v. Lanson Newsome, Warden, Georgia State Prison, Reidsville, Georgia Anchor | green | “this court has stated that the presumptive prejudice approach of the cronic dictum applies to a narrow range of cases where there is a fundamental breakdown of the adversarial process.” | 3 |
| 2 | United States v. Salim Fakhoury | green | “rial counsel was reprimanded by the district judge for leaving the courtroom when the government was presenting its case . . . .” | 3 |
| 3 | Miguel Vines v. United States | green | “trial errors are subject to harmless-error analysis; structural defects are not.” | 3 |
| 4 | United States v. Kaid (Ahmed) | green | “saleh argues, however, that the above mentioned strickland requirements, particularly the prejudice prong, are not necessary because his counsel's absence constituted per se ineffective assistance.” | 3 |
| 5 | Hunter v. Va. State Bar | green | “when occurs, the reviewing court presumes the defendant was prejudiced and his conviction is in turn vacated.” | 3 |
A red or yellow flag on a member means the underlying case has negative treatment — for those, check the case page before relying on the passage.