American Criminal Law Review - 2014
- Reducing criminal wrongdoing within business organizations: the practical and political skills of integrity.
- How prosecutors apply the 'federal prosecutions of corporations' charging policy in the era of deferred prosecutions, and what that means for the purposes of the federal criminal sanction.
- Copyright infringement and the separated powers of moral entrepreneurship.
- Sentencing note.
- Abstract risk and the politics of the criminal law.
- Strict vicarious criminal liability for corporations and corporate executives: stretching the boundaries of criminalization.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- Editor's note.
- Editor's note.
- False statements and false claims.
- Antitrust violations.
- Encouraging ethics in organizations: a review of some key research findings.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- The non-conscious aspects of ethical behavior: not everything in the 'good' organization is deliberate and intentional.
- Securities fraud.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Election law violations.
- Environmental crimes.
- The trial of Conrad Murray: prosecuting physicians for criminally negligent over-prescription.
- State v. Robert: why mitigation waivers during capital sentencing undermine fundamental justifications of punishment.
- Money laundering.
- A plea for funds: using Padilla, Lafler, and Frye to increase public defender resources.
- Guarding the rights of the accused and accuser: the jury's role in awarding criminal restitution under the Sixth Amendment.
- The hitchhikers guide to the Fourth Amendment: the plight of unreasonably seized passengers under the heightened factual nexus approach to exclusion.
- In pursuit of simple, ordinary justice.
- Irrevocable implied consent: the 'roach motel' in consent search jurisprudence!
- Health care fraud.
- Lone wolf or the start of a new pack: should the FCPA guidance represent a new paradigm in evaluating corporate criminal liability risks?
- Public corruption.
- Financial institution fraud.
- A context for evaluating Department of Justice policy on the prosecution of business organizations: is the Department of Justice playing in the right ballpark?
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Asadi v. G.E. Energy (USA) L.L.C.: a case study of the limits of Dodd-Frank anti-retaliation protections and the impact on corporate compliance objectives.
- The hitchhikers guide to the Fourth Amendment: the plight of unreasonably seized passengers under the heightened factual nexus approach to exclusion.
- Toward improving the law and policy of corporate criminal liability and sanctions.
- Computer crimes.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Reducing corporate criminality: the role of values.
- Employment-related crimes.
- Health care fraud.
- Financial institution fraud.
- Introduction.
- Battling domestic violence: replacing mandatory arrest laws with a trifecta of preferential arrest, officer education, and batterer treatment programs.
- The crime of being in charge: executive culpability and collateral consequences.
- Securities fraud.
- Environmental crimes.
- Kidnapping incorporated: the unregulated youth-transportation industry and the potential for abuse.
- Tax violations.
- In-sourcing corporate responsibility for enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Perjury.
- The Federalist Society For Law And Public Policy Studies 2012 National Lawyers Convention: The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Public corruption.
- Bringing the gavel down on stops and frisks: the equitable regulation of police power.
- The mandate of Miller.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Calling for a standard: why courts should apply a new balancing test in cell phone searches incident to arrest.
- Blind injustice: the Supreme Court, implicit racial bias, and the racial disparity in the criminal justice system.