American Criminal Law Review - 1999
- Tax violations.
- Panel discussion.
- False claims.
- Antitrust violations.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Grand jury secrecy: plugging the leaks in an empty bucket.
- Procedural issues.
- Independent counsel investigations.
- Guided to injustice? The effect of the Sentencing Guidelines on indigent defendants and public defense.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- The troubling entrapment defense: how about an economic approach?
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.
- Computer crimes.
- Money laundering.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Federal Food and Drug Act violations.
- Cruel and unusual punishment in United States prisons: sexual harassment among male inmates.
- Polygraph evidence in federal courts: should it be admissible?
- Egelhoff again.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- False statements.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Environmental crimes.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Health care fraud.
- Apprehending the weapon within: the case for criminalizing the intentional transmission of HIV.
- Alien defendants in criminal proceedings: justice shrugs.
- Considering race and crime: distilling non-partisan policy from opposing theories.
- Perjury.
- Breaking out of 'custody': a feminist voice in constitutional criminal procedure.
- Securities fraud.
- Employment-related crimes.
- Murder by premeditation.
- The case of Ex parte Lange (or how the Double Jeopardy Clause lost its 'life or limb').
- Representing indigents in serious criminal cases in England's Crown Court: the advocates' performance and incentives.
- Stranger and nonstranger rape: one crime, one penalty.
- Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.
- Mandatory minimums in drug sentencing: a valuable weapon in the war on drugs or a handcuff on judicial discretion?
- Obstruction of justice.
- Anything you say can and will be used against you: spectrographic evidence in criminal cases.