American Criminal Law Review - 1996
- Public school drug testing: the impact of Acton.
- Money laundering.
- The myth of morality and fault in criminal law doctrine.
- Health care fraud.
- Procedural issues.
- Reflections on Reves v. Ernst & Young: its meaning and impact on substantive, accessory, aiding abetting and conspiracy liability under RICO.
- A shield for swords.
- Environmental crimes.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Securities fraud.
- The future of constitutional criminal procedure.
- Environmental audit privilege and voluntary disclosure rule: the importance of federal enactment.
- Intellectual property.
- Do criminal defendants have too many rights?
- Tax evasion.
- Reciprocal discovery violations: visiting the sins of the defense lawyer on the innocent client.
- Antitrust.
- Organizational sentencing.
- Getting smart about getting tough: juvenile justice and the possibility of progressive reform.
- The deliberative lottery: a thought experiment in jury reform.
- Factories with fences: an analysis of the Prison Industry Enhancement certification program in historical perspective.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- International and domestic approaches to constitutional protections of individual rights: reconciling the Soering and Kindler decisions.
- False claims.
- What's the story? An analysis of juror discrimination and a plea for affirmative jury selection.
- Criminal law and women: giving the abused woman who kills a jury of her peers who appreciate trifles.
- Are too many guilty defendants going free?
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- The exclusionary rule at sentencing: new life under the Federal Sentencing Guidelines?
- Jury reform in America - a return to the old country.
- False statements.
- Computer crimes.
- Federal Food and Drug Act violations.
- The misguided reliance in American jurisprudence on Jewish law to support the moral legitimacy of capital punishment.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Law office searches: the assault on confidentiality and the adversary system.
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Warrantless public housing searches: individual violations or community solutions.
- Home is where your modem is: an appropriate application of search and seizure law to electronic mail.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Employment related crimes.
- The independent counsel statute: bad law, bad policy.