American Criminal Law Review - 2009
- Election law violations.
- Two ways to think about the punishment of corporations.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Health care fraud.
- Environmental crimes.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Money laundering.
- A response to the critics of corporate criminal liability.
- Time to stop living vicariously: a better approach to corporate criminal liability.
- The balance among corporate criminal liability, private civil suits, and regulatory enforcement.
- Crawford at its limits: hearsay and forfeiture in child abuse cases.
- Corporate criminal liability: when does it make sense?
- Affective forecasting and capital sentencing: reducing the effect of victim impact statements.
- Employment-related crimes.
- Reviving hope for domestic violence prosecutions: Giles v. California.
- What's in a name?
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- The centenary of a mistake: one hundred years of corporate criminal liability.
- False statements and false claims.
- Public corruption.
- Criminal responsibility in the age of "mind-reading".
- Corporate criminal liability versus corporate securities fraud liability: analyzing the divergence in standards of culpability.
- Antitrust violations.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Recommended practices for companies and their counsel in conducting internal investigations.
- Proportional mens rea.
- Piercing the veil of informant confidentiality: the role of in camera hearings in the Roviaro determination.
- Securities fraud.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Collateral damage? Juvenile snitches in America's "wars" on drugs, crime, and gangs.
- Tax violations.
- Computer crimes.
- The curious case of corporate criminality.
- Corporate criminal liability and the potential for rehabilitation.
- Perjury.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Editor's note.
- Educating compliance.
- The blameless corporation.
- The future of Teague retroactivity, or "redressability," after Danforth v. Minnesota: why lower courts should give retroactive effect to new constitutional rules of criminal procedure in postconviction proceedings.
- Regulatory investigations and the credit crisis: the search for villains.
- Breaking into the pardon power: Congress and the office of the pardon attorney.
- Bright lines on the road: the Fourth Amendment, the automatic companion rule, the "automatic container" rule, and a new rule for drug- or firearm-related traffic stop companion searches incident to lawful arrest.