Georgetown Law home page Continuing Legal Education A-Z index Directories Search Student Services Admissions & Financial Aid Academic Programs About Georgetown Law Alumni Workshops & Institutes Library Faculty & Administration About this site Site map
Issues ruler

Below are the tables of contents from current and recent issues of the American Criminal Law Review

For a list of issues currently in production, please scroll to the bottom of the page or click here.

 

VOLUME 44, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2007)

Articles

A Picture's Worth a Thousand Words: Conversational Versus Eyewitness Testimony in Criminal Convictions, by Steven B. Duke, Ann Seung-Eun Lee, and Chet K.W. Pager

Corporations Cry Uncle and Their Employees Cry Foul: Rethinking Prosecutorial Pressure on Corporate Defendants, by Preet Bharara

Essay

Crime and (with a Lag) Punishment: The Implications of Discounting for Equitable Sentencing, by Yair Listokin

Notes

Satisfy the Demands of Justice: Embrace Electronic Recording of Custodial Investigative Interviews Through Legislation, Agency Policy, or Court Mandate, by Julie Renee Linkins

Children as Adults: The Transfer of Juveniles to Adult Courts and the Potential Impact of Roper v. Simmons, by Enrico Pagnanelli

 

VOLUME 43, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2006)

Articles

Inventing the Public Defender, by Barbara Allen Babcock

Culture as Justification, Not Excuse, by Elaine M. Chiu

Emotional Competence, "Rational Understanding," and the Criminal Defendant, by Terry A. Maroney

 

VOLUME 43, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2006)

THE STATE OF FEDERAL PROSECUTION

Articles

Foreword: The State of Federal Prosecution, by Michael E. Horowitz and April Oliver

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., by Christopher J. Christie and Robert M. Hanna

Negotiating Justice: Prosecutorial Perspectives on Federal Plea Bargaining in the District of Columbia, by Mary Patrice Brown and Stevan E. Bunnell

Corporate Criminal Prosecution in a Post-Enron World: The Thompson Memo in Theory and Practice, by Christopher A. Wray and Robert K. Hur

The Defense Witness Immunity Doctrine: The Time Has Come to Give It Strength to Address Prosecutorial Overreaching, by Reid H. Weingarten and Brian M. Heberlig

Deputizing -- and Then Prosecuting -- America's Businesses in the Fight Against Illegal Immigration, by Thomas C. Green and Ileana M. Ciobanu

Under Pressure to Catch the Crooks: The Impact of Corporate Privilege Waivers on the Adversarial System, by Earl J. Silbert and Demme Doufekias Joannou

Note

Love's Labour's Lost: Michael Lewis Clark's Constitutional Challenges of 18 U.S.C. 2423(c), by Amy Messigian

 

VOLUME 43, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2006)

TWENTY-FIRST SURVEY OF WHITE COLLAR CRIME

Editor's Note

Essay

Countering the Cyber-Crime Threat, by Debora Wong Yang & Brian M. Hoffstadt

Articles

  • 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

 

VOLUME 43, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2006)

The Conviction of Lynne Stewart and the Uncertain Future of the Right to Defend, by Tamar R. Birckhead

Database Limitations on the Evidentiary Value of Forensic Mitochondrial DNA Evidence, by Frederika A. Kaestle et al.

Private Police and Democracy, by David A. Sklanksy

Indicting Corporations Revisited: Lessons of the Arthur Andersen Prosecution, by Elizabeth K. Ainslie

Expanding Protective Sweeps Within The Home, by Jamie E. Ruf

Congressional Investigations and the Role of Privilege, by Kalah E. Auchincloss

 

VOLUME 42, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2005)

Looking Foreword: Wrongful Convictions and Systemic Reform, by Daniel S. Medwed

How the Pretrial Process Contributes to Wrongful Convictions, by Andrew D. Leipold

Lost Innocence: Speculations and Data about the Acquitted, by Daniel Givelber

System Failure, by Erik Luna

Moving Down the Wedge, by Andrew M. Siegel

Evidence Destroyed, Innocence Lost: the Duty to Preserve Potentially Exculpatory Forensic Evidence under Innocence Protection Statutes, by Cynthia E. Jones

The Role of Social Sciences in Preventing Wrongful Convictions , by Jacquerline McMurtrie

The Criminal Cases Review Commission as State Strategic Selection Mechanism, by Robert Carl Schehr



VOLUME 42, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2005)

Essays

Making the Silent Speak and the Informed Wary, by George Ellard

The Lessons of People v. Moscat: Confronting Judicial Bias in Domestic Violence Cases Interpreting Crawford v. Washington, by David Jaros

Miranda and Reasonableness, by Peter B. Rutledge

Articles

The “Abuse Excuse” in Capital Sentencing Trials: Is It Relevant to Responsibility, Punishment, or Neither?, by Paul Litton

Notes

Journalists Caught in the Crossfire: Robert Novak, the First Amendment, and Journalist’s Duty of Confidentiality, by Eunnice Eun

Is Missouri v. Seibert Practicable?: Supreme Court Dances the “Two-Step” around Miranda, by Daniel S. Nooter

 

 

VOLUME 42, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2005)

TWENTIETH SURVEY OF WHITE COLLAR CRIME

Editor's Note

Essay

Motion Denied: Systematic Impediments to White Collar Criminal Defendants' Trial Preparation, by Robert G. Morvillo, Barry A. Bohrer, and Barbara L. Balter

Articles

  • 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 Fraud
  • 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

 

 

VOLUME 42, NUMBER 1 (Winter 2005)

Tribute to Samuel Dash

Eulogy: Sam Dash - A Force for Good, by Robert F. Muse

Remarks at the Georgetown University Law Center Memorial for Samuel Dash, by Steven H. Goldblatt

Articles

Uncovering the Cover-Up Crimes, by Stuart P. Green

Absolute Certainty and the Death Penalty, by Erik Lillquist

Notes

Change the Motion, Not the Venue: A Critical Look at the Change of Venue Motion, by Vineet R. Shahani

Turning a Blind Eye to Innocence: The Legacy of Herrera v. Collins, by Nicholas Berg

 

 

VOLUME 41, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2004)

Articles

Double Jeopardy, Post-Blakely, by Timothy Cone

Rethinking Entrapment, by Joseph A. Colquitt

Understanding Federal Prosecutorial Declinations: An Empirical Analysis of Predicative Factors, by Michael O’Neill

Notes

Supremacy Clause Immunity: Deriving a Willfulness Standard from Sovereign Immunity, by James Wallace

“Women of Circumstance” – The Effects of Mandatory Minimum Sentencing on Women Minimally Involved in Drug Crimes, by Shimica Gaskins

 

 

VOLUME 41, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2004)

Articles

Grandfathering Evidence: Fingerprint Admissibility Rulings From Jennings to Llera Plaza and Back Again, by Simon A. Cole

The Role of the Parent/Guardian in Juvenile Custodial Interrogations: Friend or Foe? by Hillary B. Farber

Comment

Redefining Criminal Courts: Problem-Solving & the Meaning of Justice, by Greg Berman

Notes

Electronic Surveillance in the Internet Age: The Strange Case of Pen Registers, by Robert Ditzion

Prevention of Computer Crime Amidst International Anarchy, by Brian C. Lewis

 

 

VOLUME 41, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2004)

NINETEENTH SURVEY OF WHITE COLLAR CRIME

Essay

Train Wreck? Or Can the Federal Sentencing System Be Saved? A Plea for Rapid Reversal of Blakely v. Washington, by Frank O. Bowman, III

Articles

  • 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 Fraud
  • 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

 

 

VOLUME 41, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2003)

Articles

The Useful, Dangerous Fiction of Grand Jury Independence, by Niki Kuckes

Please Step Away From the Shredder and the “Delete” Key: §§ 802 and 1102 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, by Gary G. Grindler and Jason A. Jones

Proposal

Proposed Codification of Disclosure of Favorable Information Under Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure 11 and 15, by the American College of Trial Lawyers

Debate

Gideon Introduction, by Ellen S. Podgor

Gideon at 40: Facing the Crisis, Fulfilling the Promise, by Yale Kamisar, Abe Krash, Anthony Lewis, and Ellen S. Podgor

Notes

When Money Isn't Enough: The Case for Holistic Compensation of the Wrongfully Convicted, by Shawn Armbrust

Money Laundering and Terrorism: Informal Value Transfer Systems, by Walter Perkel

 

 

VOLUME 40, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2003)

Articles

Rhetorically Reasonable Police Practices: Viewing the Supreme Court's Multiple Discourse Path, by Kathryn R. Urbonya

Forensic Use of Actuarial Risk Assessment with Sex Offenders: Accuracy, Admissability, and Accountability, by Eric S. Janus and Robert A. Prentky

COMMUNITY COURTS AND COMMUNITY JUSTICE

Foreward

Problem Solving Courts: From Innovation to Institutionalization, by Michael C. Dorf and Jeffrey A. Fagan

Commentaries

The Politics of Problem-Solving: An Overview of the Origins and Development of Therapeutic Courts, by Candace McCoy

Commentary on Candace McCoy Paper, by Laurie O. Robinson

Redefining Criminal Courts: Problem-Solving and the Meaning of Justice, by James L. Nolan, Jr.

A Neo-retributionist Responds to Professor Nolan, by Morris B. Hoffman

Community Courts and the Process of Accountability: Consensus and Conflict at the Red Hook Community Justice Center , by Victoria Malkin

Criminal Defenders and Community Justice: The Drug Court Example, by William H. Simon

Professional Identity: Comment on Simon, by Daniel Richman

Why Defenders Feel Defensive: The Defender's Role in Problem Solving Courts, by Jane M. Spinak

Notes

Mitigating the Impressionability of the Incorporeal Mind: Reassessing Unanimity Following the Pattern of Jury Instructions in the Obstruction of Justice Case of United States v. Arthur Anderson, L.L.P., by Sterling Price Adams Darling, Jr.

Litigating Terrorism: The New FISA Regime, the Wall, and the Fourth Amendment, by Grayson A. Hoffman

 

 

VOLUME 40, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2003)

Articles

Contradiction, Coherence, and Guided Discretion in the Supreme Court's Capital Sentencing Jurisprudence, by Mary Sigler

Defining Racial Profiling in a Post-September 11 World, by Deborah A. Ramirez, Jennifer Hoopes, and Tara Lai Quinlan

Foreign Nationals in the United States Witness Security Program: A Remedy For Every Wrong?, by Tarik Abdel-Monem

Notes

Watch What You Type: As the FBI Records Your Keystrokes, the Fourth Amendment Develops Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, by Rachel S. Martin

Are the Courts in a Trance? Approaches to the Admissibility of Hypnotically Enhanced Witness Testimony in Light of Empirical Evidence, by Daniel R. Webert

Life on the Line: Pondering the Fate of a Substantive Due Process Challenge to the Death Penalty, by Daniel G. Bird

 

 

VOLUME 40, NUMBER 2 (SPRING 2003)

EIGHTEENTH SURVEY OF WHITE COLLAR CRIME

Essay

Corporate Crime After 2000: A New Law Enforcement Challenge or Déjà Vu?, by Abbe David Lowell and Kathryn C. Arnold

Articles

  • 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 Fraud
  • Health Care Fraud
  • Intellectual Property Crimes
  • Mail and Wire Fraud
  • Money Laundering
  • Obstruction of Justice
  • Perjury
  • Procedural Issues
  • RICO
  • Securities Fraud
  • Tax Violations

 

 

VOLUME 40, NUMBER 1 (WINTER 2002)

Introduction

Fortieth Anniversary Introduction, Perspectives on the Federal Sentencing Guidelines and Mandatory Sentencing, by Samuel Dash

Foreword

You Be the Judge: The Success of Fifteen Years of Sentencing Under the United States Sentencing Guidelines, by Kirby D. Behre and A. Jeff Ifrah

Lecture

Mandatory Sentencing: One Judge's Perspective – 2002, by Hon. Louis F. Oberdorfer

Articles

The Reason Behind the Rules: Finding and Using the Philosophy of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, by Paul J. Hofer and Mark H. Allenbaugh

Fifteen Years After the Federal Sentencing Revolution: How Mandatory Minimums Have Undermined Effective and Just Narcotics Sentencing, by Ian Weinstein

Lecture

The Supreme Court, Criminal Procedure and Judicial Integrity, by Stephen A. Saltzburg

Note

John Walker Lindh and Yaser Esam Hamdi: Closing the Loophole in International Humanitarian Law for American Nationals Captured Abroad While Fighting With Enemy Forces, by Melysa H. Sperber

 


Currently in production:

VOLUME 44, NUMBER 2 (Spring 2007)

TWENTY-SECOND SURVEY OF WHITE COLLAR CRIME

Editor's Note

Essay

Behind the Scenes at the Enron Trial: Creating the Decisive Moments, by John Hueston

Articles

  • 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

 

VOLUME 44, NUMBER 3 (SUMMER 2007)

Articles

Every Juror Wants a Story: Narrative Relevance, Third Party Guilt and the Right to Present a Defense, by John H. Blume, Sheri L. Johnson, and Emily C. Paavola

Congressional Investigations: Politics and Process, by James Hamilton, Robert F. Muse and Kevin R. Amer

Notes

What's Wrong with a Little More Double Jeopardy? A 21st Century Recalibration of an Ancient Individual Right, by Kyden Creekpaum

Learning from Katrina: Emphasizing the Right to a Speedy Trial to Protect Constitutional Guarantees in Disasters, by Patrick Ellard

Technical Knockout: Hudson v. Michigan and the Unfortunate Demise of the Knock-and-Announce Rule, by Dan Gutin

 

VOLUME 44, NUMBER 4 (FALL 2007)

Symposium: Corporate Criminality: Legal, Ethical and Managerial Implications

Foreword, by John Hasnas

Panel I: Why Punish? Exploration of the Justification for and Standards of Corporate Criminal Liability
* Pamela Bucy
* Alan Strudler & William Laufer
* Andrew Weissman

Panel II: Regulation Through Criminalization: When Is the Criminal Sanction Appropriate?
* Christine Hurt
* Craig Lerner & Moin Yahya
* Geraldine Szott Moohr

Luncheon address, by Hon. Dick Thornburgh

Panel III: The Challenge of Cooperation: Considerations of the Ethical and Managerial Implications of the Organizational Sentencing Guidelines, Thompson Memorandum, SOX, etc.
* Patrick Gnazzo
* Julie O’Sullivan
* Michael Elston
* David M. Zornow

Panel IV: Solutions: What Reforms, if any, Are Necessary?
* Hon. George Terwilliger
* Sara Sun Beale
* Michael O’Neill
* Ellen Podgor

Please contact Brett Marston in the Office of Journal Administration for more information.

 

Revised April 19, 2007 (BEM)