American Criminal Law Review

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from March 1994
Last Number: January 2016

Georgetown University Law Center
ISSN 0164-0364


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 748

March 22, 1998

  • Financial institutions fraud.

  • Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

  • Health care fraud.

  • Independent counsel investigations.

  • Intellectual property crimes.

  • Mail and wire fraud.

  • Money laundering.

  • Obstruction of justice.

  • Organizational sentencing.

  • Perjury.

  • Procedural issues.

  • Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.

  • Securities fraud.

  • Tax violations.

  • June 22, 1998

  • The ex post facto clause and the jurisprudence of punishment.

  • Megan's Law and the protection of the child in the on-line age.

  • Autonomy versus a client's best interests: the defense lawyer's dilemma when mentally ill clients seek to control their defense.

  • Government regulation of encryption: the entry of 'big brother' or the status quo?

  • January 01, 1999

  • Cruel and unusual punishment in United States prisons: sexual harassment among male inmates.

  • The case of Ex parte Lange (or how the Double Jeopardy Clause lost its 'life or limb').

  • Polygraph evidence in federal courts: should it be admissible?

  • The troubling entrapment defense: how about an economic approach?

  • March 22, 1999

  • Murder by premeditation.

  • Representing indigents in serious criminal cases in England's Crown Court: the advocates' performance and incentives.

  • Panel discussion.

  • Considering race and crime: distilling non-partisan policy from opposing theories.

  • Anything you say can and will be used against you: spectrographic evidence in criminal cases.

  • Apprehending the weapon within: the case for criminalizing the intentional transmission of HIV.

  • June 22, 1999

  • Grand jury secrecy: plugging the leaks in an empty bucket.

  • Antitrust violations.

  • Computer crimes.

  • Corporate criminal liability.

  • Employment-related crimes.

  • Environmental crimes.

  • False claims.

  • False statements.

  • Federal criminal conflict of interest.

  • Federal criminal conspiracy.

  • Federal Food and Drug Act violations.

  • Financial institutions fraud.

  • Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

  • Health care fraud.

  • Independent counsel investigations.

  • Intellectual property crimes.

  • Mail and wire fraud.

  • Money laundering.

  • Obstruction of justice.

  • Perjury.

  • Procedural issues.

  • Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.