
Thea Johnson
- Visiting Professor of Law
J.D., George Washington University Law School, 2009
A.B., Harvard University, 2003
Criminal Law
Criminal Procedure
Criminal Trial Practice
Evidence
J.D., George Washington University Law School, 2009
A.B., Harvard University, 2003
Criminal Law
Criminal Procedure
Criminal Trial Practice
Evidence
Professor Johnson is a scholar of criminal procedure and one of the country's leading experts on plea bargaining practice and reform. Her scholarship focuses on the role of plea bargaining in the criminal legal system, including the ways in which stakeholders manipulate the plea process and stretch ethical boundaries to achieve particular outcomes. Her article, “Fictional Pleas,” was selected for inclusion in the Yale/Stanford/Harvard Junior Faculty Forum and as the runner-up for the 2019 American Association of Law Schools’ Criminal Justice Section Junior Scholars’ Paper Competition. At Rutgers Law, Johnson received the 2022 Greg Lastowka Award for scholarly excellence.
Johnson was also the Reporter for the American Bar Association's Plea Bargain Task Force. She authored the Task Force's Report, which provided fourteen overarching principles and detailed guidance on ethical plea practice for policymakers, judges, and lawyers across the country. She is also a member of the Academic Working Group at the Plea Bargaining Institute at Belmont Law School.
Prior to joining the faculty at Rutgers Law, Johnson was an Associate Professor of Law at the University of Maine School of Law where she was awarded Law Professor of the Year in 2019 and 2020. She was also a Thomas C. Grey Fellow at Stanford Law School, and a public defender with both the Federal Defenders of New York and the Criminal Defense Division of The Legal Aid Society in New York.
Professor Johnson graduated with honors from The George Washington University Law School where she spent a semester working for the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda in Arusha, Tanzania. Prior to law school, Professor Johnson taught 8th-grade English and social studies at Colegio Americano de Quito (The American School of Quito) in Ecuador. She received her degree magna cum laude in history from Harvard.