American Criminal Law Review - 2006
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Corporate criminal prosecution in a post-Enron world: the Thompson Memo in theory and practice.
- Money laundering.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Public corruption.
- Securities fraud.
- Antitrust violations.
- Computer crimes.
- Inventing the public defender.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Employment-related crimes.
- Private police and democracy.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Emotional competence, "rational understanding," and the criminal defendant.
- Foreword: the state of federal prosecution.
- Culture as justification, not excuse.
- The conviction of Lynne Stewart and the uncertain future of the right to defend.
- Health care fraud.
- False statements and false claims.
- Editor's note.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Congressional investigations and the role of privilege.
- Indicting corporations revisited: lessons of the Arthur Andersen prosecution.
- Deputizing - and then prosecuting - America's businesses in the fight against illegal immigration.
- Love's labour's lost: Michael Lewis Clark's constitutional challenge of 18 U.S.C. 2423(c).
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Environmental crimes.
- Foreign corrupt practices act.
- Expanding protective sweeps within the home.
- Database limitations on the evidentiary value of forensic mitochondrial DNA evidence.
- The defense witness immunity doctrine: the time has come to give it strength to address prosecutorial overreaching.
- Tax violations.
- A push down the road of good corporate citizenship: the deferred prosecution agreement between the U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.
- Under pressure to catch the crooks: the impact of corporate privilege waivers on the adversarial system.
- Countering the cyber-crime threat.
- Negotiating justice: prosecutorial perspectives on federal plea bargaining in the District of Columbia.
- Perjury.