American Criminal Law Review - page 2
- Securities fraud.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- The public defender as private offender: a retreat from evolving malpractice liability standards for public defenders.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Federal Food and Drug Act violations.
- Social solidarity and the enforcement of morality revisited: some thoughts on H.L.A. Hart's critique of Durkheim.
- Perjury.
- The trial as text: allegory, myth and symbol in the adversarial criminal process - a critique of the role of the public defender and a proposal for reform.
- Megan's Law and the protection of the child in the on-line age.
- "Private justice" and FCPA enforcement: should the SEC whistleblower program include a qui tam provision?
- Organizational sentencing.
- When business conduct turns violent: bringing BP, Massey, and other scofflaws to justice.
- Educating compliance.
- Reducing criminal wrongdoing within business organizations: the practical and political skills of integrity.
- Antitrust violations.
- Never efficient, but always free: how the juvenile adjudication question is the latest sign that Almendarez-Torres v. United States should be overturned.
- Street diversion and decarceration.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Warrantless public housing searches: individual violations or community solutions.
- The states are right: arguing for the continued use of state legislatures in forming a national consensus for the evolving standards of decency.
- The blameless corporation.
- The numbers don't add up: challenging the premise of J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B.
- 'From pillar to post': the prosecution of American presidents.
- Elder (in)justice: a critique of the criminalization of elder abuse.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- False statements.
- The U.S. criminal-immigration convergence and its possible undoing.
- Antitrust violations.
- Antitrust violations.
- Auspices of Austin: examining excessivenss of civil forfeitures under the Eighth Amendment.
- Unethical intrusion: the disproportionate impact of law enforcement DNA sampling on minority populations.
- Environmental crimes.
- Public corruption.
- Computer crimes.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- Regulating the 'new regulators': current trends in deferred prosecution agreements.
- Congress v. the attorney-client privilege: a 'full and frank' discussion.
- Mail and wired fraud.
- Employment-related crimes.
- The role of the social sciences in preventing wrongful convictions.
- Environmental crimes.
- Editor's note.
- Money laundering.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- The exclusion of coerced confessions and the regulation of custodial interrogation under the American Convention on Human Rights.
- Perjury.
- The evolution of corporate criminal settlements: an empirical perspective on non-prosecution, deferred prosecution, and plea agreements.
- On the brink of a brave new world: the death of privilege in corporate criminal investigations.
- Redistributing rape.
- Deputizing - and then prosecuting - America's businesses in the fight against illegal immigration.
- The troubling entrapment defense: how about an economic approach?
- Public corruption.
- Federal Food and Drug Act violations.
- The misguided reliance in American jurisprudence on Jewish law to support the moral legitimacy of capital punishment.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- How lethal injection reform constitutes impermissible research on prisoners.
- Bringing the gavel down on stops and frisks: the equitable regulation of police power.
- The mandate of Miller.
- "In a puff of smoke": drug crime and the perils of subjective entrapment.
- Spicy little conversations: technology in the workplace and a call for a new cross-doctrinal jurisprudence.
- The Federalist Society For Law And Public Policy Studies 2012 National Lawyers Convention: The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Medical or recreational marijuana and drugged driving.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- ABA criminal justice standards on the treatment of prisoners adopted by the ABA House of Delegates (February 2010).
- Perjury.
- The centenary of a mistake: one hundred years of corporate criminal liability.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Federal criminal prosecutions of kickback arrangements in the healthcare sector involving private pay patients.
- Public corruption.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- The trial of Conrad Murray: prosecuting physicians for criminally negligent over-prescription.
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.
- High-tech surveillance tools and the Fourth Amendment: reasonable expectations of privacy in the technological age.
- Tax violations.
- Subverting symbolism: the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act and cooperative federalism.
- Perjury.
- Internal corporate investigations: the waiver of attorney-client privilege and work-product protection through voluntary disclosures to the government.
- False statements and false claims.
- Money laundering.
- Federal criminal conflict of interest.
- Self-defense, moral acceptability, and compensation: a response to professor Fontaine.
- Procedural issues.
- Health care fraud.
- Editor's note.
- Computer-related crimes.
- Criminal responsibility in the age of "mind-reading".
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Punishing protestations of innocence: denying responsibility and its consequences.
- For they know not what they do: reintroducing infancy protections for child sex offenders in light of In re B.W.
- Waiving the criminal justice system: an empirical and constitutional analysis.
- Environmental crimes.
- Congressional investigations: politics and process.
- How parental liability statutes criminalize and stigmatize minority mothers.
- False claims.
- The political path of detention policy.
- Securities fraud.
- The plight of the unsuspected drug user: a police officer's take on Arizona v. Gant.
- An exclusionary rule for police lies.
- Prosecutorial discretion and selective prosecution: enforcing protection after United States v. Armstrong.
- Foreign corrupt practices act.
- A spectacular non sequitur: the Supreme Court's contemporary Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule jurisprudence.
- The ex post facto clause and the jurisprudence of punishment.
- Intellectual property crimes.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- False statements and false claims.
- 'Could have,' 'would have': what the Supreme Court should have decided in Whren v. United States.
- In-sourcing corporate responsibility for enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Life, death, and Medicare fraud: the corruption of hospice and what the private public partnership under the federal False Claims Act is doing about it.
- Election law violations.
- Learning from Katrina: emphasizing the right to a speedy trial to protect constitutional guarantees in disasters.
- Antitrust violations.
- Schools, cyberbullies, and the surveillance state.
- Financial institutions fraud.
- A striking disconnect: marital rape law's failure to keep up with domestic violence law.
- Money laundering.
- An empirical examination of the factors associated with the commutation of state death row prisoners' sentences between 1986 and 2005.
- Pension forfeiture: a problematic sanction for public corruption.
- Federal criminal conspiracy.
- An attack on self-defense.
- Securities fraud.
- The myth of morality and fault in criminal law doctrine.
- Is corporate criminal liability unique?
- Remarks on "the challenge of cooperation: consideration of the ethical and managerial implications of the organizational sentencing guidelines, Thompson memorandum, SOX, etc".
- Congressional re-election through symbolic politics: the enhanced banking crime penalties.
- Criminal law and women: giving the abused woman who kills a jury of her peers who appreciate trifles.
- Money laundering.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- State v. Robert: why mitigation waivers during capital sentencing undermine fundamental justifications of punishment.
- False claims.
- Tax evasion.
- Corporate and white collar crime: simplifying the ambiguous.
- Antitrust violations.
- Prescribing medicine for online pharmacies: an assessment of the law and a proposal to combat illegal drug outlets.
- Perjury.
- Egelhoff again.
- The lessons of People v. Moscat: confronting judicial bias in domestic violence cases interpreting Crawford v. Washington.
- In memoriam: William W. Greenhalgh.
- False statements and false claims.
- Regulatory investigations and the credit crisis: the search for villains.
- Beyond rehabilitation: a new theory of indeterminate sentencing.
- Perjury.
- Financial institution fraud.
- Regulating segregation: the contribution of the ABA criminal justice standards on the treatment of prisoners.
- The modern view of capital punishment.
- Computer crimes.
- Indicting corporations revisited: lessons of the Arthur Andersen prosecution.
- Balancing rehabilitation and punishment: combining juvenile court waiver mechanisms to create a balanced justice system.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Slow acid drips and evidentiary nightmares: smoothing out the rough justice of child pornography restitution with a presumed damages theory.
- Perjury.
- Law office searches: the assault on confidentiality and the adversary system.
- Money laundering.
- The Criminal Cases Review Commission as a state strategic selection mechanism.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Computer crimes.
- Material to whom? Implementing Brady's duty to disclose at trial and during plea bargaining.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Striking the proper balance: articulating the role of morality in the legislative and judicial processes.
- Corporate criminal liability.
- Tinkering around the edges: the Supreme Court's death penalty jurisprudence.
- Antitrust violations.
- Breaking into the pardon power: Congress and the office of the pardon attorney.
- Employment-related crimes.
- Antitrust violations.
- Environmental crimes.
- Expert testimony on eyewitness identification: a new pair of glasses for the jury.
- Obstruction of justice.
- Health care fraud.
- Between death and a hard place: Hopkins v. Reeves and the 'stark choice' between capital conviction and outright acquittal.
- Securities fraud.
- Significant entanglements: a framework for the civil consequences of criminal convictions.
- Environmental crimes.
- Is Missouri v. Seibert practicable? Supreme Court dances the "two-step" around Miranda.
- Walking the tightrope of statutory rape law: using international legal standards to serve the best interests of juvenile offenders and victims.
- Corporate liability standards: when should corporations be held criminally liable?
- Search warrant power over the individual: aiming for a cohesive application of Michigan v. Summers.
- Mail and wire fraud.
- Hazy future: the impact of federal and state legal dissonance on marijuana businesses.
- Intellectual property.
- Corporate criminal liability versus corporate securities fraud liability: analyzing the divergence in standards of culpability.
- Lone wolf or the start of a new pack: should the FCPA guidance represent a new paradigm in evaluating corporate criminal liability risks?
- When deference is dangerous: the judicial role in material-witness detentions.
- Sparf and Dougherty revisited: why the court should instruct the jury of its nullification right.
- Tax evasion.
- The genealogy detectives: a constitutional analysis of 'familial searching.'(IV. The Reasonableness of Inner-Directed and Outer-Directed Trawling through Conclusion, with footnotes, p. 138-163)
- A picture's worth a thousand words: conversational versus eyewitness testimony in criminal convictions.
- Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
- Recording federal custodial interviews.
- Auctioning justice: legal and market mechanisms for allocating criminal appellate counsel.
- Criminal law theory and criminal justice practice.
- Federal sentencing for violent and drug trafficking crimes involving firearms: recent changes and prospects for improvement.
- Material-support-to-terrorism prosecutions: fighting terrorism by eroding judicial review.
- Election law violations.
- Public school drug testing: the impact of Acton.
- Health care fraud.
- Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.
- Public corruption.