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, 2005

  • Miranda and reasonableness.

  • The "abuse excuse" in capital sentencing trials: is it relevant to responsibility, punishment, or neither?

  • Journalists caught in the crossfire: Robert Novak, the First Amendment, and journalist's duty of confidentiality.

  • Is Missouri v. Seibert practicable? Supreme Court dances the "two-step" around Miranda.

  • March 22, 2006

  • Countering the cyber-crime threat.

  • Antitrust violations.

  • Computer crimes.

  • Corporate criminal liability.

  • Employment-related crimes.

  • Environmental crimes.

  • False statements and false claims.

  • Federal criminal conspiracy.

  • Financial institutions fraud.

  • Foreign corrupt practices act.

  • Health care fraud.

  • Intellectual property crimes.

  • Mail and wire fraud.

  • Money laundering.

  • Obstruction of justice.

  • Perjury.

  • Public corruption.

  • Racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations.

  • Securities fraud.

  • Tax violations.

  • June 22, 2006

  • A push down the road of good corporate citizenship: the deferred prosecution agreement between the U.S. attorney for the District of New Jersey and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.

  • Negotiating justice: prosecutorial perspectives on federal plea bargaining in the District of Columbia.

  • Corporate criminal prosecution in a post-Enron world: the Thompson Memo in theory and practice.

  • The defense witness immunity doctrine: the time has come to give it strength to address prosecutorial overreaching.

  • Deputizing - and then prosecuting - America's businesses in the fight against illegal immigration.

  • Under pressure to catch the crooks: the impact of corporate privilege waivers on the adversarial system.

  • Love's labour's lost: Michael Lewis Clark's constitutional challenge of 18 U.S.C. 2423(c).

  • June 22, 2007

  • Every juror wants a story: narrative relevance, third party guilt and the right to present a defense.

  • Congressional investigations: politics and process.

  • What's wrong with a little more double jeopardy? A 21st century recalibration of an ancient individual right.

  • Learning from Katrina: emphasizing the right to a speedy trial to protect constitutional guarantees in disasters.

  • Technical knockout: Hudson v. Michigan and the unfortunate demise of the knock-and-announce rule.

  • March 22, 2007

  • Behind the scenes of the Enron trial: creating the decisive moments.

  • Antitrust violations.

  • Computer crimes.

  • Corporate criminal liability.

  • Employment-related crimes.

  • Environmental crimes.

  • False statements and false claims.

  • Federal criminal conspiracy.

  • Financial institutions fraud.

  • Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

  • Health care fraud.

  • Intellectual property crimes.

  • Mail and wire fraud.

  • Money laundering.