American Criminal Law Review - 2000
- False claims.
- High-tech surveillance tools and the Fourth Amendment: reasonable expectations of privacy in the technological age.
- Tax violations.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Health care fraud.
- Punishing protestations of innocence: denying responsibility and its consequences.
- Securities fraud.
- Procedural issues.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Computer crimes.
- Corporate intentionality, desert, and variants of vicarious liability.
- Employment-related crimes.
- How parental liability statutes criminalize and stigmatize minority mothers.
- Juvenile justice: reform after one hundred years.
- Antitrust violations.
- Back with a vengeance: the resilience of retribution as an articulated purpose of criminal punishment.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Environmental crimes.
- Safeguarding equal protection rights: the search for an exclusionary rule under the equal protection clause.
- 'From pillar to post': the prosecution of American presidents.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.
- A global war on drugs: why the United States should support the prosecution of drug traffickers in the International Criminal Court.
- Perjury.
- DNA databases: when fear goes too far.
- Traffic stops, littering tickets, and police warnings: the case for a Fourth Amendment non-custodial arrest doctrine.
- The end of the road for Miranda v. Arizona? On the history and future of rules for police interrogation.
- Federal food and drug act violations.
- Will Miranda survive? Dickerson v. United States: the right to remain silent, the Supreme Court, and Congress.
- Between death and a hard place: Hopkins v. Reeves and the 'stark choice' between capital conviction and outright acquittal.
- Corporate liability standards: when should corporations be held criminally liable?
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Federal sentencing for violent and drug trafficking crimes involving firearms: recent changes and prospects for improvement.
- False statements.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Federal sentencing guidelines and the Rehnquist Court: theories of statutory interpretation.
- On the brink of a brave new world: the death of privilege in corporate criminal investigations.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Money laundering.