American Criminal Law Review
- Piercing the veil of informant confidentiality: the role of in camera hearings in the Roviaro determination.
- False claims.
- High-tech surveillance tools and the Fourth Amendment: reasonable expectations of privacy in the technological age.
- Unraveling criminal statutes of limitations.
- Behind the scenes of the Enron trial: creating the decisive moments.
- Money laundering.
- Tax evasion.
- Irrevocable implied consent: the 'roach motel' in consent search jurisprudence!
- Health care fraud.
- When the constable behaves and the courts blunder: expanding the good-faith exception in the wake of Arizona v. Gant.
- Do criminal defendants have too many rights?
- In self-defense regarding self-defense: a rejoinder to professor Corrado.
- Cleaning up the chicken coop of sentencing uniformity: guiding the discretion of federal prosecutors through the use of the Model Rules of Professional Conduct.
- The external evolution of criminal law.
- The dialogue approach to Miranda warnings and waiver.
- Antitrust violations.
- Obstruction of justice.
- The ex post facto clause and the jurisprudence of punishment.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Pulling the trigger: evaluating criminal gun laws in a post-Heller world.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Lonesome agony: Heard v. The District of Columbia and the struggle against disability discrimination in the D.C. penal system.
- The non-conscious aspects of ethical behavior: not everything in the 'good' organization is deliberate and intentional.
- Securities fraud.
- Money laundering.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Securities fraud.
- A spectacular non sequitur: the Supreme Court's contemporary Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule jurisprudence.
- Technical knockout: Hudson v. Michigan and the unfortunate demise of the knock-and-announce rule.
- Money laundering.
- Miranda and reasonableness.
- Law office searches: the assault on confidentiality and the adversary system.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Environmental crimes.
- Federalizing the no-contact rule: the authority of the Attorney General.
- False claims.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Employment-related crimes.
- The future of constitutional criminal procedure.
- Intellectual property.
- Employment law violations.
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Organizational sentencing.
- Safeguarding equal protection rights: the search for an exclusionary rule under the equal protection clause.
- In defense of the 'per se' rule: Justice Stewart's struggle to preserve the Fourth Amendment's warrant clause.
- False statements.
- False statements.
- Intellectual property.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Editor's note.
- Health care fraud.
- What's the story? An analysis of juror discrimination and a plea for affirmative jury selection.
- Just say no! A proposal to eliminate racially discriminatory uses of peremptory challenges.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Making the silent speak and the informed wary.
- A response to the critics of corporate criminal liability.
- Tax violations.
- Tax violations.
- The mandate of Miller.
- A spectacular non sequitur: the Supreme Court's contemporary Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule jurisprudence.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Crime and (with a lag) punishment: the implications of discounting for equitable sentencing.
- Achieving the coexistence of accountability and immunity: the prosecution of Devyani Khobragade and the role of consular immunity in criminal cases.
- Public corruption.
- Lone wolf or the start of a new pack: should the FCPA guidance represent a new paradigm in evaluating corporate criminal liability risks?
- Antitrust violations.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Election law violations.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- 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.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Cruel and unusual punishment in United States prisons: sexual harassment among male inmates.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Perjury.
- Checking the balance: prosecutorial power in an age of expansive legislation.
- Money laundering.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Medical or recreational marijuana and drugged driving.
- Sparf and Dougherty revisited: why the court should instruct the jury of its nullification right.
- Alien defendants in criminal proceedings: justice shrugs.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Corporate criminal liability versus corporate securities fraud liability: analyzing the divergence in standards of culpability.
- False statements and false claims.
- Encouraging ethics in organizations: a review of some key research findings.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Outcasts: the exclusion of sexual offenders from social networking sites.
- The role of the social sciences in preventing wrongful convictions.
- Recommended practices for companies and their counsel in conducting internal investigations.
- Editor's note.
- Proportional mens rea.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Environmental audit privilege and voluntary disclosure rule: the importance of federal enactment.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Truly constitutional? The American double jeopardy clause and its Australian analogues.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Justice Scalia and the Confrontation Clause: a case study in originalist adjudication of individual rights.
- Securities fraud.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Securities fraud.
- Antitrust violations.
- Election law violations.
- Deputizing - and then prosecuting - America's businesses in the fight against illegal immigration.
- Computer crimes.
- Hazy future: the impact of federal and state legal dissonance on marijuana businesses.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Elder (in)justice: a critique of the criminalization of elder abuse.
- Securities fraud.
- Organizational sentencing.
- Editor's note.
- The Dunkin' Donuts gap: rethinking the exclusionary rule as a remedy in constitutional criminal procedure.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Antitrust violations.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Love's labour's lost: Michael Lewis Clark's constitutional challenge of 18 U.S.C. 2423(c).
- Mandating discretion: juvenile sentencing schemes after Miller v. Alabama.
- 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.
- Antitrust violations.
- Scarlet letter sex offender databases and community notification: sacrificing personal privacy for a symbol's sake.
- Money laundering.
- Prosecution deferred: exploring the unintended consequences and future of corporate cooperation.
- Congressional investigations: politics and process.
- Health care fraud.
- In memoriam: William W. Greenhalgh.
- Bringing the gavel down on stops and frisks: the equitable regulation of police power.
- The road from Jones: the requirement of reasonableness for a GPS search of a vehicle.
- Procedural issues.
- Prior sexual misconduct evidence in state courts: constitutional and common law challenges.
- Environmental crimes.
- "In a puff of smoke": drug crime and the perils of subjective entrapment.
- Tax violations.
- The troubling entrapment defense: how about an economic approach?
- The defense witness immunity doctrine: the time has come to give it strength to address prosecutorial overreaching.
- Public corruption.
- Health care fraud.
- Between death and a hard place: Hopkins v. Reeves and the 'stark choice' between capital conviction and outright acquittal.
- Environmental crimes.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Computer crimes.
- Common scents: the intersection of the 'plain smell' and 'common enterprise' doctrines.
- Federal Food and Drug Act violations.
- Two ways to think about the punishment of corporations.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Public school drug testing: the impact of Acton.
- Strategic segregation in the modern prison.
- The evolution of corporate criminal settlements: an empirical perspective on non-prosecution, deferred prosecution, and plea agreements.
- Collateral damage? Juvenile snitches in America's "wars" on drugs, crime, and gangs.
- Corporate liability standards: when should corporations be held criminally liable?
- Environmental crimes.
- Raj Rajaratnam's historic insider trading sentence.
- Battling domestic violence: replacing mandatory arrest laws with a trifecta of preferential arrest, officer education, and batterer treatment programs.
- Parole: corpse or phoenix?
- The modern view of capital punishment.
- Federal Food and Drug Act violations.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Life, death, and Medicare fraud: the corruption of hospice and what the private public partnership under the federal False Claims Act is doing about it.
- International and domestic approaches to constitutional protections of individual rights: reconciling the Soering and Kindler decisions.
- Environmental crimes.
- Copyright infringement and the separated powers of moral entrepreneurship.
- Private police and democracy.
- Regulating the 'new regulators': current trends in deferred prosecution agreements.
- Election law violations.
- Perjury.
- Ignorance, discretion and the fairness of notice: confronting 'apparent innocence' in the criminal law.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Mail and wire 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.
- False claims.
- Perjury.
- Schools, cyberbullies, and the surveillance state.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Under-breaded shrimp and other high crimes: addressing the over-criminalization of commercial regulation.
- Public corruption.
- Perjury.
- The exclusion of coerced confessions and the regulation of custodial interrogation under the American Convention on Human Rights.
- Corporate criminal liability: when does it make sense?
- Warrantless public housing searches: individual violations or community solutions.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Permeation of race, national origin and gender issues from initial law enforcement contact through sentencing: the need for sensitivity, equalitarianism and vigilance in the criminal justice system.
- A shield for swords.
- Congressional re-election through symbolic politics: the enhanced banking crime penalties.
- Has demand for crime increased? The prevalence of personal media devices and the robbery spike in 2005 and 2006.
- Database limitations on the evidentiary value of forensic mitochondrial DNA evidence.
- A wavering bright line: how Crawford v. Washington denies defendants a consistent confrontation right.
- The blameless corporation.
- Considering race and crime: distilling non-partisan policy from opposing theories.
- Organizational sentencing.