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

January 01, 2009

  • Recommended practices for companies and their counsel in conducting internal investigations.

  • Affective forecasting and capital sentencing: reducing the effect of victim impact statements.

  • Proportional mens rea.

  • Corporate criminal liability versus corporate securities fraud liability: analyzing the divergence in standards of culpability.

  • Piercing the veil of informant confidentiality: the role of in camera hearings in the Roviaro determination.

  • March 22, 2009

  • Editor's note.

  • Regulatory investigations and the credit crisis: the search for villains.

  • Antitrust violations.

  • Computer crimes.

  • Corporate criminal liability.

  • Election law violations.

  • 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.

  • September 22, 2009

  • The blameless corporation.

  • The centenary of a mistake: one hundred years of corporate criminal liability.

  • Two ways to think about the punishment of corporations.

  • Time to stop living vicariously: a better approach to corporate criminal liability.

  • Corporate criminal liability and the potential for rehabilitation.

  • Corporate criminal liability: when does it make sense?

  • The balance among corporate criminal liability, private civil suits, and regulatory enforcement.

  • A response to the critics of corporate criminal liability.

  • The curious case of corporate criminality.

  • Educating compliance.

  • Breaking into the pardon power: Congress and the office of the pardon attorney.

  • What's in a name?

  • January 01, 2010

  • An exclusionary rule for police lies.

  • An attack on self-defense.

  • Self-defense, moral acceptability, and compensation: a response to professor Fontaine.

  • In self-defense regarding self-defense: a rejoinder to professor Corrado.

  • Professor Fontaine and self-defense: a reply to his rejoinder.

  • Walking the tightrope of statutory rape law: using international legal standards to serve the best interests of juvenile offenders and victims.

  • Providing those with mental illness full and fair treatment: legislative considerations in the post-Clark era.

  • June 22, 2010

  • The blameless corporation.

  • March 22, 2010

  • Editor's note.

  • A proposal for a United States Department of Justice Foreign Corrupt Practices Act leniency policy.

  • Federal criminal prosecutions of kickback arrangements in the healthcare sector involving private pay patients.