In this article, Professor O\u27Sullivan, who served as the reporter for the U.S. Sentencing Commission\u27s Ad Hoc Advisory Group for Organizational Sentencing Guidelines, reflects on that Group\u27s work. She concludes that the potential impact of many of the policy fixes within the power of the Sentencing Commission is dwarfed by decisions that lie solely within the power of the Department of Justice or Congress. Specifically, Department of Justice decisions regarding what constitutes organizational cooperation may have a determinative impact on organizational incentives regarding compliance efforts and decisions to investigate, self-report, and cooperate in the remediation of organizational wrongdoing. Professor O\u27Sullivan also des...
Established principles governing corporate criminal liability apply indiscriminately to all corporat...
In an effort to stimulate discussion on the policy choices that Congress should have (but has not) m...
Deciding how much time a person should spend in prison for a serious crime is an inherently moral an...
In this article, Professor O\u27Sullivan, who served as the reporter for the U.S. Sentencing Commiss...
This Article traces the Sentencing Commission\u27s path in completing that task32 and considers what...
The first Federal Sentencing Guidelines for Organizational Defendants ( Guidelines ) became effecti...
Part I of this Article provides a brief overview of the Guidelines and discusses how they define and...
In 1987, the United States Sentencing Commission took what was supposed to be the first step in an ...
This article demonstrates that, at least since the adoption of the Organizational Sentencing Guideli...
Essentially, what is wrong with the Guidelines is that they are rules without -without rationality,...
The new Draft Guidelines for Organizational Defendants released by the U.S. Sentencing Commission ...
This Article explains how the federal organizational sentencing guidelines work and how they have cr...
The United States Sentencing Commission promulgates the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, which greatly...
Organizations that have benefitted from the commission of federal crimes committed by their employee...
This Article discusses the advantages and disadvantages of implementing an effective compliance prog...
Established principles governing corporate criminal liability apply indiscriminately to all corporat...
In an effort to stimulate discussion on the policy choices that Congress should have (but has not) m...
Deciding how much time a person should spend in prison for a serious crime is an inherently moral an...
In this article, Professor O\u27Sullivan, who served as the reporter for the U.S. Sentencing Commiss...
This Article traces the Sentencing Commission\u27s path in completing that task32 and considers what...
The first Federal Sentencing Guidelines for Organizational Defendants ( Guidelines ) became effecti...
Part I of this Article provides a brief overview of the Guidelines and discusses how they define and...
In 1987, the United States Sentencing Commission took what was supposed to be the first step in an ...
This article demonstrates that, at least since the adoption of the Organizational Sentencing Guideli...
Essentially, what is wrong with the Guidelines is that they are rules without -without rationality,...
The new Draft Guidelines for Organizational Defendants released by the U.S. Sentencing Commission ...
This Article explains how the federal organizational sentencing guidelines work and how they have cr...
The United States Sentencing Commission promulgates the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, which greatly...
Organizations that have benefitted from the commission of federal crimes committed by their employee...
This Article discusses the advantages and disadvantages of implementing an effective compliance prog...
Established principles governing corporate criminal liability apply indiscriminately to all corporat...
In an effort to stimulate discussion on the policy choices that Congress should have (but has not) m...
Deciding how much time a person should spend in prison for a serious crime is an inherently moral an...