American Criminal Law Review - 2011
- Editor's note.
- Normalizing Guantanamo.
- Securities fraud.
- Health care fraud.
- When business conduct turns violent: bringing BP, Massey, and other scofflaws to justice.
- Capital hypocrisy: does compelling jurors to impose the death penalty without spiritual guidance violate jurors' First Amendment rights?
- Obstruction of justice.
- Money laundering.
- Executing those who do not kill: a categorical approach to proportional sentencing.
- A wavering bright line: how Crawford v. Washington denies defendants a consistent confrontation right.
- Redistributing rape.
- "In a puff of smoke": drug crime and the perils of subjective entrapment.
- Computer crimes.
- Tax violations.
- Strategic segregation in the modern prison.
- Environmental crimes.
- Prince Harry and the honey trap: an argument for criminalizing the nonconsensual use of genetic information.
- Employment-related crimes.
- False statements and false claims.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Wavering on waiver: Montejo v. Louisiana and the Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Can a right be less than the sum of its parts? How the conflation of compulsory process and due process guarantees diminishes criminal defendants' rights.
- The perversions of prison: on the origins of hypermasculinity and sexual violence in confinement.
- Blowing the whistle on the Dodd-Frank amendments: the case against the new amendments to whistleblower protection in section 806 of Sarbanes-Oxley.
- Election law violations.
- Spicy little conversations: technology in the workplace and a call for a new cross-doctrinal jurisprudence.
- Judicial discretion to consider sentencing disparities created by fast-track programs: resolving the post-Kimbrough circuit split.
- The limits of national security.
- Seized by the moment - but which moment? How a physical force seizure requires only contact with intent to restrain, not intentional termination of movement.
- Beyond rehabilitation: a new theory of indeterminate sentencing.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- A striking disconnect: marital rape law's failure to keep up with domestic violence law.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Antitrust violations.
- The political path of detention policy.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Public corruption.
- Plea bargains, convictions and legitimacy.
- Deal or no deal: why courts should allow defendants to present evidence that they rejected favorable plea bargains.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Perjury.