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, 2011

  • When business conduct turns violent: bringing BP, Massey, and other scofflaws to justice.

  • 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, 2011

  • The political path of detention policy.

  • The limits of national security.

  • A striking disconnect: marital rape law's failure to keep up with domestic violence law.

  • June 22, 2012

  • When deference is dangerous: the judicial role in material-witness detentions.

  • When deference is dangerous: the judicial role in material-witness detentions.

  • Significant entanglements: a framework for the civil consequences of criminal convictions.

  • The dialogue approach to Miranda warnings and waiver.

  • The dialogue approach to Miranda warnings and waiver.

  • Lessons of disloyalty in the world of criminal informants.

  • Reimagining criminal prosecution: toward a color-conscious professional ethic for prosecutors.

  • Reimagining criminal prosecution: toward a color-conscious professional ethic for prosecutors.

  • Pulling the trigger: evaluating criminal gun laws in a post-Heller world.

  • Kids waive the darndest constitutional rights: the impact of J.D.B. v. North Carolina on juvenile interrogation.

  • Search warrant power over the individual: aiming for a cohesive application of Michigan v. Summers.

  • September 22, 2012

  • Schools, cyberbullies, and the surveillance state.

  • Schools, cyberbullies, and the surveillance state.

  • Slow acid drips and evidentiary nightmares: smoothing out the rough justice of child pornography restitution with a presumed damages theory.

  • Slow acid drips and evidentiary nightmares: smoothing out the rough justice of child pornography restitution with a presumed damages theory.

  • It's complicated: privacy and domestic violence.

  • Necessary suffering? Weighing government and prisoner interests in determining what is cruel and unusual.

  • Subverting symbolism: the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act and cooperative federalism.

  • Tinkering around the edges: the Supreme Court's death penalty jurisprudence.

  • The First Amendment and the regulation of pharmaceutical marketing: challenges to the constitutionality of the FDA's interpretation of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act.

  • The minotaur defense: the myth of the pathological intoxication defense.

  • The right to remain encrypted: the self-incrimination doctrine in the digital age.

  • Raj Rajaratnam's historic insider trading sentence.

  • January 01, 2013

  • A spectacular non sequitur: the Supreme Court's contemporary Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule jurisprudence.

  • A spectacular non sequitur: the Supreme Court's contemporary Fourth Amendment exclusionary rule jurisprudence.

  • Shields, swords, and fulfilling the exclusionary rule's deterrent function.