American Criminal Law Review - 1997
- 'God mail': authentication and admissibility of electronic mail in federal courts.
- Tax evasion.
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.
- Internal corporate investigations: the waiver of attorney-client privilege and work-product protection through voluntary disclosures to the government.
- Cleaning up the chicken coop of sentencing uniformity: guiding the discretion of federal prosecutors through the use of the Model Rules of Professional Conduct.
- Cell phone snooping: why electronic eavesdropping goes unpunished.
- Westec story: gated communities and the Fourth Amendment.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Procedural issues.
- False claims.
- Organizational sentencing.
- Search and seizure protections for undocumented aliens: the territoriality and voluntary presence principles in Fourth Amendment law.
- Justice Scalia and the Confrontation Clause: a case study in originalist adjudication of individual rights.
- Pension forfeiture: a problematic sanction for public corruption.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Perjury.
- Computer crimes.
- Antitrust violations.
- Auspices of Austin: examining excessivenss of civil forfeitures under the Eighth Amendment.
- Thou shalt not kill any nice people: the problem of victim impact statements in capital sentencing.
- Auctioning justice: legal and market mechanisms for allocating criminal appellate counsel.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Globalization and the federal prosecution of white collar crime.
- Intellectual property.
- The modern view of capital punishment.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- False statements.
- Congress v. the attorney-client privilege: a 'full and frank' discussion.
- Environmental crimes.
- Employment-related crimes.
- Money laundering.
- Health care fraud.
- A 'second look' at crack cocaine sentencing policies: one more try for federal equal protection.
- Prosecutorial discretion and selective prosecution: enforcing protection after United States v. Armstrong.
- 'Could have,' 'would have': what the Supreme Court should have decided in Whren v. United States.
- Securities fraud.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Mail & wire fraud.
- Federal Food and Drug Act violations.
- A new 'sliding scale of deference' approach to abuse of discretion: appellate review of district court departures under the federal sentencing guidelines.