American Criminal Law Review - 1994
- In defense of the 'per se' rule: Justice Stewart's struggle to preserve the Fourth Amendment's warrant clause.
- The numbers don't add up: challenging the premise of J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B.
- Just say no! A proposal to eliminate racially discriminatory uses of peremptory challenges.
- Social solidarity and the enforcement of morality revisited: some thoughts on H.L.A. Hart's critique of Durkheim.
- Antitrust violations.
- Employment-related crimes.
- A brief historical overview of the use of the mixed jury.
- Corporate and white collar crime: simplifying the ambiguous.
- Congressional re-election through symbolic politics: the enhanced banking crime penalties.
- The effects of race-conscious jury selection on public confidence in the fairness of jury proceedings: an empirical puzzle.
- The necessity of memory experts for the defense in prosecutions for child sexual abuse based on repressed memories.
- The right to counsel in Native American tribal courts: tribal sovereignty and congressional control.
- Peremptory challenges as a shield for the pariah.
- 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.
- The jury is still out: the role of jury science in the modern American courtroom.
- In memoriam: William W. Greenhalgh.
- The exclusion of coerced confessions and the regulation of custodial interrogation under the American Convention on Human Rights.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Money laundering.
- False claims.
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.