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

June 22, 1999

  • Securities fraud.

  • Tax violations.

  • September 22, 1999

  • Egelhoff again.

  • Mandatory minimums in drug sentencing: a valuable weapon in the war on drugs or a handcuff on judicial discretion?

  • Breaking out of 'custody': a feminist voice in constitutional criminal procedure.

  • Stranger and nonstranger rape: one crime, one penalty.

  • Alien defendants in criminal proceedings: justice shrugs.

  • Guided to injustice? The effect of the Sentencing Guidelines on indigent defendants and public defense.

  • January 01, 2000

  • The end of the road for Miranda v. Arizona? On the history and future of rules for police interrogation.

  • Federal sentencing for violent and drug trafficking crimes involving firearms: recent changes and prospects for improvement.

  • A global war on drugs: why the United States should support the prosecution of drug traffickers in the International Criminal Court.

  • Federal sentencing guidelines and the Rehnquist Court: theories of statutory interpretation.

  • High-tech surveillance tools and the Fourth Amendment: reasonable expectations of privacy in the technological age.

  • March 22, 2000

  • Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

  • Health care fraud.

  • Intellectual property crimes.

  • Mail and wire fraud.

  • Money laundering.

  • Obstruction of justice.

  • Perjury.

  • Procedural issues.

  • Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.

  • Securities fraud.

  • Tax violations.

  • False statements.

  • Federal criminal conflict of interest.

  • Federal criminal conspiracy.

  • Federal food and drug act violations.

  • Financial institutions fraud.

  • On the brink of a brave new world: the death of privilege in corporate criminal investigations.

  • Antitrust violations.

  • Computer crimes.

  • Corporate criminal liability.

  • Employment-related crimes.

  • Environmental crimes.

  • False claims.

  • June 22, 2000

  • 'From pillar to post': the prosecution of American presidents.

  • Safeguarding equal protection rights: the search for an exclusionary rule under the equal protection clause.

  • Traffic stops, littering tickets, and police warnings: the case for a Fourth Amendment non-custodial arrest doctrine.

  • Will Miranda survive? Dickerson v. United States: the right to remain silent, the Supreme Court, and Congress.

  • How parental liability statutes criminalize and stigmatize minority mothers.

  • DNA databases: when fear goes too far.

  • September 22, 2000

  • Corporate liability standards: when should corporations be held criminally liable?

  • Corporate intentionality, desert, and variants of vicarious liability.

  • Back with a vengeance: the resilience of retribution as an articulated purpose of criminal punishment.

  • Punishing protestations of innocence: denying responsibility and its consequences.

  • Juvenile justice: reform after one hundred years.

  • Between death and a hard place: Hopkins v. Reeves and the 'stark choice' between capital conviction and outright acquittal.