The purpose of this article is to examine the dimensions of an individual\u27s Fifth Amendment privilege in a civil antitrust action where the person has not yet been guaranteed that criminal prosecution is no longer possible. Two issues are apparent: first, under what conditions may a civil antitrust defendant properly invoke the privilege; second, if a civil antitrust plaintiff seeks to discover information privileged under the Fifth Amendment, what is the proper response to the problem? Folding Carton provides an excellent example of the process of antitrust litigation and demonstrates the tensions involved. Using that case as an example, the article examines the competing interests and analyzes the various standards for protection under...
Negating the Communist Party\u27s statutory obligation to disclose information inculpatory to its me...
Transactional immunity, on one hand, affords a witness absolute immunity from prosecution for the of...
Trade secret defendants sometimes raise First Amendment defenses to trade secret misappropriation cl...
The purpose of this article is to examine the dimensions of an individual\u27s Fifth Amendment privi...
Specifically, this Article examines whether settlement agreements and consent decrees resulting from...
In this article we ask (1) under what circumstances are competitor suits meritorious, and (2) do exi...
The Supreme Court has extended to corporations many of the same constitutional rights that were orig...
Consistently, through many centuries, the right to remain silent has protected individuals against a...
The author analyzes the conceptual bases of two rules applied in antitrust litigation: the first all...
The doctrine of implied antitrust immunity allows courts to reconcile two inconsistent congressional...
This Article focuses on two limits to federal antitrust law—the Noerr-Pennington and state action do...
The Supreme Court has recently ruled that a three-person partnership does not have a fifth amendment...
This Note argues that a person should be able to assert her fifth amendment privilege against self-i...
This Article addresses a long-unresolved issue in criminal and constitutional law: Does the Fifth Am...
The attorney-client privilege recently has undergone significant social, political, and ideological ...
Negating the Communist Party\u27s statutory obligation to disclose information inculpatory to its me...
Transactional immunity, on one hand, affords a witness absolute immunity from prosecution for the of...
Trade secret defendants sometimes raise First Amendment defenses to trade secret misappropriation cl...
The purpose of this article is to examine the dimensions of an individual\u27s Fifth Amendment privi...
Specifically, this Article examines whether settlement agreements and consent decrees resulting from...
In this article we ask (1) under what circumstances are competitor suits meritorious, and (2) do exi...
The Supreme Court has extended to corporations many of the same constitutional rights that were orig...
Consistently, through many centuries, the right to remain silent has protected individuals against a...
The author analyzes the conceptual bases of two rules applied in antitrust litigation: the first all...
The doctrine of implied antitrust immunity allows courts to reconcile two inconsistent congressional...
This Article focuses on two limits to federal antitrust law—the Noerr-Pennington and state action do...
The Supreme Court has recently ruled that a three-person partnership does not have a fifth amendment...
This Note argues that a person should be able to assert her fifth amendment privilege against self-i...
This Article addresses a long-unresolved issue in criminal and constitutional law: Does the Fifth Am...
The attorney-client privilege recently has undergone significant social, political, and ideological ...
Negating the Communist Party\u27s statutory obligation to disclose information inculpatory to its me...
Transactional immunity, on one hand, affords a witness absolute immunity from prosecution for the of...
Trade secret defendants sometimes raise First Amendment defenses to trade secret misappropriation cl...