American Criminal Law Review - 2010
- In self-defense regarding self-defense: a rejoinder to professor Corrado.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Securities fraud.
- Environmental crimes.
- The states are right: arguing for the continued use of state legislatures in forming a national consensus for the evolving standards of decency.
- Election law violations.
- Public corruption.
- A proposal for a United States Department of Justice Foreign Corrupt Practices Act leniency policy.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Lonesome agony: Heard v. The District of Columbia and the struggle against disability discrimination in the D.C. penal system.
- The blameless corporation.
- Health care fraud.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and the elusive question of intent.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Professor Fontaine and self-defense: a reply to his rejoinder.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Conflicts of interest in criminal cases: should the prosecution have a duty to disclose?
- When the constable behaves and the courts blunder: expanding the good-faith exception in the wake of Arizona v. Gant.
- Lego v. Twomey: the improbable relationship between an obscure Supreme Court decision and wrongful convictions.
- Providing those with mental illness full and fair treatment: legislative considerations in the post-Clark era.
- False statements and false claims.
- Federal criminal prosecutions of kickback arrangements in the healthcare sector involving private pay patients.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Regulating segregation: the contribution of the ABA criminal justice standards on the treatment of prisoners.
- Computer crimes.
- Striking the proper balance: articulating the role of morality in the legislative and judicial processes.
- Perjury.
- Money laundering.
- Improving conditions of confinement for criminal inmates and immigrant detainees.
- Tax violations.
- Outcasts: the exclusion of sexual offenders from social networking sites.
- Walking the tightrope of statutory rape law: using international legal standards to serve the best interests of juvenile offenders and victims.
- Self-defense, moral acceptability, and compensation: a response to professor Fontaine.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Extrajudicial comments and the special responsibilities of prosecutors: failings of the model rules in today's media age.
- Editor's note.
- ABA criminal justice standards on the treatment of prisoners adopted by the ABA House of Delegates (February 2010).
- Employment-related crimes.
- The Dunkin' Donuts gap: rethinking the exclusionary rule as a remedy in constitutional criminal procedure.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- An exclusionary rule for police lies.
- The plight of the unsuspected drug user: a police officer's take on Arizona v. Gant.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Antitrust violations.
- An attack on self-defense.
- The challenge of prison oversight.