American Criminal Law Review - 2005
- Perjury.
- Moving down the wedge of injustice: a proposal for a third generation of wrongful convictions scholarship and advocacy.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Making the silent speak and the informed wary.
- Lost innocence: speculation and data about the acquitted.
- System failure.
- Miranda and reasonableness.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- The role of the social sciences in preventing wrongful convictions.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- The "abuse excuse" in capital sentencing trials: is it relevant to responsibility, punishment, or neither?
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Tax violations.
- Evidence destroyed, innocence lost: the preservation of biological evidence under innocence protection statutes.
- Looking foreword: wrongful convictions and systemic reform.
- Money laundering.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- The Criminal Cases Review Commission as a state strategic selection mechanism.
- How the pretrial process contributes to wrongful convictions.
- Journalists caught in the crossfire: Robert Novak, the First Amendment, and journalist's duty of confidentiality.
- Securities fraud.
- Is Missouri v. Seibert practicable? Supreme Court dances the "two-step" around Miranda.
- Public corruption.
- Health care fraud.
- The lessons of People v. Moscat: confronting judicial bias in domestic violence cases interpreting Crawford v. Washington.