Volume 46 | Issue Four |
Articles
Introduction: New England Law Review Symposium on “Convicting the Innocent” |
Brandon L. Garrett |
The Dangers of Eyewitnesses for the Innocent: Learning from the Past and Projecting Into the Age of Social Media |
Elizabeth E. Loftus & Deborah Davis |
False Confessions and Correcting Injustices |
Gisli H. Gudjonsson |
Forensic Science and Wrongful Convictions: From Contributor to Exposer to Corrector |
Simon A. Cole |
To Walk In Their Shoes: The Problem of Missing, Misrepresented, and Misunderstood Context in Judging Criminal Confessions |
Richard A. Leo & Deborah Davis |
Notes
When Your Best Friend Is Your Worst Enemy: How 18 U.S.C. § 1519 Transforms Internal Investigations Into State Action and Unexpected Waiver of Attorney-Client Privilege |
Robert Buchholz |
An Un-Watchful Eye: How Courts Have Allowed Emerging Electronic Surveillance Escape Fourth Amendment Protection |
Brian Davis |
Reasonable Suspicion of an Unjust Conclusion: Why the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court’s Holding in Commonwealth v. Cruz has Crippled the Enforcement of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 94C, § 32L |
John Sullivan |
Comments
People v. Flick: Modernizing the Michigan Child Pornography Statute to Criminalize “Viewing” in Response to Evolving Internet Technology |
Julianne Fitzpatrick |
The Magic Bullet in People v. Perez: Charging Attempts Based on Culpability and Deterrence Regardless of Apparent Ability |
Andrew Garza |