American Criminal Law Review - 1995
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Justice Thurgood Marshall and capital punishment: social justice and the rule of law.
- Truly constitutional? The American double jeopardy clause and its Australian analogues.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Foreword.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Ignorance, discretion and the fairness of notice: confronting 'apparent innocence' in the criminal law.
- Federal Rule of Evidence 413: a dangerous new frontier.
- Organizational sentencing.
- Two critical evidentiary issues in child sexual abuse cases: closed-circuit testimony by child victims and exceptions to the hearsay rule.
- False statements.
- False claims.
- Intellectual property.
- Antitrust violations.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Unconstitutional conditions: is the Fourth Amendment for sale in public housing?
- Checking the balance: prosecutorial power in an age of expansive legislation.
- Securities fraud.
- Money laundering.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- The public defender as private offender: a retreat from evolving malpractice liability standards for public defenders.
- Federal Food and Drug Act violations.
- The trial as text: allegory, myth and symbol in the adversarial criminal process - a critique of the role of the public defender and a proposal for reform.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Procedural issues.
- Computer-related crimes.
- The Money Laundering Control Act of 1986: creating a new federal offense or merely affording federal prosecutors an alternative means of punishing specified unlawful activity?
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.
- Employment-related crimes.
- Expert testimony on eyewitness identification: a new pair of glasses for the jury.
- Sparf and Dougherty revisited: why the court should instruct the jury of its nullification right.
- Tax evasion.
- Federalizing the no-contact rule: the authority of the Attorney General.
- Defunding death.
- Environmental crimes.