I. Introduction II. The Allure of Subpoenaing an Investigative Target III. Privacy, Papers, and the Privilege: Overcoming the Legacy of Boyd v. United States IV. Fisher v. United States: What Does “Authentication” Mean at the Investigative Stage ... A. The Irrelevance of Authentication before the Grand Jury ... B. Distinguishing the Investigative and Trial Phases in the Act of Production Analysis ... C. Once Lost, Can the Privilege be Reasserted? V. Braswell v. United States: Limiting Use at Trial of the Custodian’s Act of Production VI. Compelling a Custodian’s Testimony as “Auxiliary” to the Act of Production ... A. Curcio v. United States: Dictum Masquerading as Fifth Amendment Analysis ... B. The Legacy of Curcio: “Auxiliary” Testimony ...
Andresen v. Maryland, 96 S.Ct. 2737 (1976). The fifth amendment guarantees that no person … shall b...
Smith, sole owner and officer of a clothing corporation, appeared before an OPA examiner in response...
This comment is intended to be a companion piece to the Comment in Vanderbilt Law Review, Vol. I, No...
I. Introduction II. The Allure of Subpoenaing an Investigative Target III. Privacy, Papers, and the ...
article published in law reviewThis symposium article, the first of two on regulation of government'...
This Note argues that a person should be able to assert her fifth amendment privilege against self-i...
One of the most critical areas of the courts\u27 inquisitorial power involves organizational documen...
During its last term, the Supreme Court decided two cases involving the production of documents and ...
The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution provides that no person may be compelled in an...
Consistently, through many centuries, the right to remain silent has protected individuals against a...
This Article addresses a long-unresolved issue in criminal and constitutional law: Does the Fifth Am...
Petitioner, who was known as an underworld character and racketeer, was subpoenaed before a federal ...
In the past few years, criminal procedure scholars have fundamentally transformed our understanding ...
Five years ago, in a contribution to these pages, I suggested that the Supreme Court\u27s oldest pre...
This Article addresses the issue of whether an accused person should be entitled to obtain and use a...
Andresen v. Maryland, 96 S.Ct. 2737 (1976). The fifth amendment guarantees that no person … shall b...
Smith, sole owner and officer of a clothing corporation, appeared before an OPA examiner in response...
This comment is intended to be a companion piece to the Comment in Vanderbilt Law Review, Vol. I, No...
I. Introduction II. The Allure of Subpoenaing an Investigative Target III. Privacy, Papers, and the ...
article published in law reviewThis symposium article, the first of two on regulation of government'...
This Note argues that a person should be able to assert her fifth amendment privilege against self-i...
One of the most critical areas of the courts\u27 inquisitorial power involves organizational documen...
During its last term, the Supreme Court decided two cases involving the production of documents and ...
The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution provides that no person may be compelled in an...
Consistently, through many centuries, the right to remain silent has protected individuals against a...
This Article addresses a long-unresolved issue in criminal and constitutional law: Does the Fifth Am...
Petitioner, who was known as an underworld character and racketeer, was subpoenaed before a federal ...
In the past few years, criminal procedure scholars have fundamentally transformed our understanding ...
Five years ago, in a contribution to these pages, I suggested that the Supreme Court\u27s oldest pre...
This Article addresses the issue of whether an accused person should be entitled to obtain and use a...
Andresen v. Maryland, 96 S.Ct. 2737 (1976). The fifth amendment guarantees that no person … shall b...
Smith, sole owner and officer of a clothing corporation, appeared before an OPA examiner in response...
This comment is intended to be a companion piece to the Comment in Vanderbilt Law Review, Vol. I, No...