American Criminal Law Review
- In self-defense regarding self-defense: a rejoinder to professor Corrado.
- Strict vicarious criminal liability for corporations and corporate executives: stretching the boundaries of criminalization.
- Cleaning up the chicken coop of sentencing uniformity: guiding the discretion of federal prosecutors through the use of the Model Rules of Professional Conduct.
- Nursing the truth: developing a framework for admission of sane testimony under the medical treatment hearsay exception and the confrontation clause.
- Securities fraud.
- Normalizing Guantanamo.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- The non-conscious aspects of ethical behavior: not everything in the 'good' organization is deliberate and intentional.
- Procedural issues.
- Money laundering.
- Health care fraud.
- Behind the scenes of the Enron trial: creating the decisive moments.
- Procedural issues.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Editor's note.
- A proposal for a United States Department of Justice Foreign Corrupt Practices Act leniency policy.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Procedural issues.
- A new corporate world mandates a "good faith" affirmative defense.
- Antitrust violations.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- In pursuit of simple, ordinary justice.
- Safeguarding equal protection rights: the search for an exclusionary rule under the equal protection clause.
- Money laundering.
- Grand jury secrecy: plugging the leaks in an empty bucket.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- What's the story? An analysis of juror discrimination and a plea for affirmative jury selection.
- Tax violations.
- False claims.
- Public corruption.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Federal Food and Drug Act violations.
- Crime and (with a lag) punishment: the implications of discounting for equitable sentencing.
- Health care fraud.
- Tax evasion.
- Trending now: the use of social media websites in public shaming punishments.
- Reciprocal discovery violations: visiting the sins of the defense lawyer on the innocent client.
- False statements.
- Search and seizure protections for undocumented aliens: the territoriality and voluntary presence principles in Fourth Amendment law.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Just say no! A proposal to eliminate racially discriminatory uses of peremptory challenges.
- False statements and false claims.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Obstruction of justice.
- A response to the critics of corporate criminal liability.
- The necessity of memory experts for the defense in prosecutions for child sexual abuse based on repressed memories.
- Tax violations.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- A context for evaluating Department of Justice policy on the prosecution of business organizations: is the Department of Justice playing in the right ballpark?
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Justice Scalia and the Confrontation Clause: a case study in originalist adjudication of individual rights.
- Computer crimes.
- Employment-related crimes.
- Securities fraud.
- Scarlet letter sex offender databases and community notification: sacrificing personal privacy for a symbol's sake.
- Computer crimes.
- Prosecution deferred: exploring the unintended consequences and future of corporate cooperation.
- False statements.
- How prosecutors apply the 'federal prosecutions of corporations' charging policy in the era of deferred prosecutions, and what that means for the purposes of the federal criminal sanction.
- Lonesome agony: Heard v. The District of Columbia and the struggle against disability discrimination in the D.C. penal system.
- Deputizing - and then prosecuting - America's businesses in the fight against illegal immigration.
- Public corruption.
- Looking foreword: wrongful convictions and systemic reform.
- Money laundering.
- Love's labour's lost: Michael Lewis Clark's constitutional challenge of 18 U.S.C. 2423(c).
- Cooperation with the government is good for companies, investors, and the economy.
- False statements and false claims.
- Pulling the trigger: evaluating criminal gun laws in a post-Heller world.
- Employment-related crimes.
- The future of constitutional criminal procedure.
- Recommended practices for companies and their counsel in conducting internal investigations.
- Proportional mens rea.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Environmental audit privilege and voluntary disclosure rule: the importance of federal enactment.
- Computer crimes.
- Juvenile justice: reform after one hundred years.
- Foreword: the state of federal prosecution.
- Prince Harry and the honey trap: an argument for criminalizing the nonconsensual use of genetic information.
- The misguided reliance in American jurisprudence on Jewish law to support the moral legitimacy of capital punishment.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- How lethal injection reform constitutes impermissible research on prisoners.
- Securities fraud.
- Bringing the gavel down on stops and frisks: the equitable regulation of police power.
- The mandate of Miller.
- "In a puff of smoke": drug crime and the perils of subjective entrapment.
- Tax violations.
- Mandating discretion: juvenile sentencing schemes after Miller v. Alabama.
- The end of Smith v. Maryland? The NSA's bulk telephony metadata program and the Fourth Amendment in the cyber age.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- The dialogue approach to Miranda warnings and waiver.
- Environmental crimes.
- Inventing the public defender.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- The "abuse excuse" in capital sentencing trials: is it relevant to responsibility, punishment, or neither?
- For every action there is a reaction: the procedural pushback against Panetti v. Quarterman.
- The ex post facto clause and the jurisprudence of punishment.
- The road from Jones: the requirement of reasonableness for a GPS search of a vehicle.
- The defense witness immunity doctrine: the time has come to give it strength to address prosecutorial overreaching.
- The absence of agency in indigent defense.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Tax violations.
- Perjury.
- Guided to injustice? The effect of the Sentencing Guidelines on indigent defendants and public defense.
- Securities fraud.
- Employment-related crimes.
- Public corruption.
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.
- Treatment under razor wire: conditions of confinement at the Moose Lake sex offender treatment facility.
- Securities fraud.
- Health care fraud.
- Outcasts: the exclusion of sexual offenders from social networking sites.
- The minotaur defense: the myth of the pathological intoxication defense.
- Federal Rule of Evidence 413: a dangerous new frontier.
- Computer crimes.
- DNA databases: when fear goes too far.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- False claims.
- Unconstitutional conditions: is the Fourth Amendment for sale in public housing?
- Employment-related crimes.
- Tax violations.
- Sentencing.
- Environmental crimes.
- Privacy vs. public safety: prosecuting and defending criminal cases in the post-Snowden era.
- Election law violations.
- Perjury.
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Spicy little conversations: technology in the workplace and a call for a new cross-doctrinal jurisprudence.
- The Federalist Society For Law And Public Policy Studies 2012 National Lawyers Convention: The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Medical or recreational marijuana and drugged driving.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- ABA criminal justice standards on the treatment of prisoners adopted by the ABA House of Delegates (February 2010).
- Perjury.
- The centenary of a mistake: one hundred years of corporate criminal liability.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- A push down the road of good corporate citizenship: the deferred prosecution agreement between the U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.
- Physical searches under FISA: a constitutional analysis.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Employment-related crimes.
- Lessons from the private enforcement of health care fraud.
- Health care fraud.
- Waiving the criminal justice system: an empirical and constitutional analysis.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Money laundering.
- Environmental crimes.
- Obstruction of justice.
- 'Could have,' 'would have': what the Supreme Court should have decided in Whren v. United States.
- Schools, cyberbullies, and the surveillance state.
- Battling domestic violence: replacing mandatory arrest laws with a trifecta of preferential arrest, officer education, and batterer treatment programs.
- Collateral damage? Juvenile snitches in America's "wars" on drugs, crime, and gangs.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Are too many guilty defendants going free?
- Countering the cyber-crime threat.
- Modern mail fraud: the restoration of the public/private distinction.
- Securities fraud.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Anything you say can and will be used against you: spectrographic evidence in criminal cases.
- Asadi v. G.E. Energy (USA) L.L.C.: a case study of the limits of Dodd-Frank anti-retaliation protections and the impact on corporate compliance objectives.
- Judicial discretion to consider sentencing disparities created by fast-track programs: resolving the post-Kimbrough circuit split.
- Election law violations.
- Securities fraud.
- Truly constitutional? The American double jeopardy clause and its Australian analogues.
- Health care fraud.
- Organizational sentencing.
- It doesn't pass the Sell test: focusing on 'the facts of the individual case' in involuntary medication inquiries.
- Digital searches and the Fourth Amendment: the interplay between the plain view doctrine and search-protocol warrant restrictions.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Kids waive the darndest constitutional rights: the impact of J.D.B. v. North Carolina on juvenile interrogation.
- Environmental crimes.
- Health care fraud.
- False statements and false claims.
- Checking the balance: prosecutorial power in an age of expansive legislation.
- The limits of national security.
- Health care fraud.
- Editor's note.
- The genealogy detectives: a constitutional analysis of 'familial searching.'(Introduction through III. Acquiring DNA for Trawling as a Search, p. 109-138)
- Election law violations.
- Editor's note.
- Is Texas tough on crime but soft on criminal procedure?
- In defense of the 'per se' rule: Justice Stewart's struggle to preserve the Fourth Amendment's warrant clause.
- Interpersonal power in the criminal system.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- The dangers of over-criminalization and the need for real reform: the dilemma of artificial entities and artificial crimes.
- Money laundering.
- Stranger and nonstranger rape: one crime, one penalty.
- Obstruction of justice.
- False claims.
- Justice Thurgood Marshall and capital punishment: social justice and the rule of law.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Securities fraud.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- The public defender as private offender: a retreat from evolving malpractice liability standards for public defenders.
- Mail and wire fraud.