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Flawlessly Strawless?, Marguerite Moloney Aug 2020

Flawlessly Strawless?, Marguerite Moloney

Fordham Environmental Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Belt-And-Suspenders Canon, Ethan J. Leib, James J. Brudney Jan 2020

The Belt-And-Suspenders Canon, Ethan J. Leib, James J. Brudney

Faculty Scholarship

This Essay christens a new canon into the doctrines of statutory interpretation, one that can counter the too-powerful canon that has courts imposing norms against redundancy in their readings of statutes. Judges engaging in statutory interpretation must do a better job of recognizing how and why legislatures choose not to draft with perfect parsimony. Our Essay highlights the multifarious ways legislatures in federal and state governments self-consciously and thoughtfully – rather than regrettably and lazily – think about employing “belt-and-suspenders” efforts in their drafting practices. We then analyze in depth courts’ disparate efforts to integrate a belt-and-suspenders canon into their …


Why Isn’T Congress More Corrupt?: A Preliminary Inquiry, Richard L. Hasen Nov 2015

Why Isn’T Congress More Corrupt?: A Preliminary Inquiry, Richard L. Hasen

Fordham Law Review

In the aftermath of the indictment of New York State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver on corruption charges, law professor (and recent reformist gubernatorial candidate) Zephyr Teachout published an op-ed in the New York Times entitled “Legalized Bribery.” In it, she argued that campaign contributions are a “gateway drug” to bribes and that politicians are “pre- corrupted” by taking campaign contributions and doing favors for contributors. She wants campaign finance limits, public financing, and limits on outside income for legislators. Although Teachout used powerful rhetoric and suggested worthy reforms, I see her as offering an empirical hypothesis about the relationship between …


Love, Equality, And Corruption, Zephyr Teachout Nov 2015

Love, Equality, And Corruption, Zephyr Teachout

Fordham Law Review

What is corruption? Unless one takes an absolute (and hard to defend) view of words’ meanings—there is a fixed meaning, it cannot differ—this question can mean different things. What has it meant in the past? What has it meant to judges? What social function does the word play? Does it have any meaning at all, or is it just another word for a different idea? Does the meaning it had historically have any coherence? Does the meaning it has now have any coherence? What do most people think it means? What do most scholars think, or most lawyers, …


Cross-Border Corruption Enforcement: A Case For Measured Coordination Among Multiple Enforcement Authorities, Jay Holtmeier Nov 2015

Cross-Border Corruption Enforcement: A Case For Measured Coordination Among Multiple Enforcement Authorities, Jay Holtmeier

Fordham Law Review

The steady increase in cooperation and information sharing among governments is a trend commonly noted in discussions of current anticorruption enforcement. There is no shortage of evidence to support this observation. In 2013 and 2014 alone, the Department of Justice (DOJ) and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) recognized the cooperation and assistance of foreign law enforcement authorities in at least twenty-three actions brought under the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA or “the Act”). U.S. enforcement authorities—once the world’s primary anticorruption enforcers—increasingly can and do rely on the help of their international counterparts and are pursuing more investigations that run …


The Uncomfortable Truths And Double Standards Of Bribery Enforcement, Mike Koehler Nov 2015

The Uncomfortable Truths And Double Standards Of Bribery Enforcement, Mike Koehler

Fordham Law Review

In recent years, Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) enforcement has become a top priority for the U.S. government, and government enforcement officials have stated that “we in the United States are in a unique position to spread the gospel of anti-corruption” and that FCPA enforcement ensures not only that the United States “is on the right side of history, but also that it has a hand in advancing that history.”

However, the FCPA is not the only statute in the federal criminal code concerning bribery. Rather, the FCPA was modeled in large part after the U.S. domestic bribery statute, and …


The “Demand Side” Of Transnational Bribery And Corruption: Why Leveling The Playing Field On The Supply Side Isn’T Enough, Lucinda A. Low, Sarah R. Lamoree, John London Nov 2015

The “Demand Side” Of Transnational Bribery And Corruption: Why Leveling The Playing Field On The Supply Side Isn’T Enough, Lucinda A. Low, Sarah R. Lamoree, John London

Fordham Law Review

The domestic and international legal framework for combating bribery and corruption (“ABC laws”), including both private and public corrupt practices that are transnational (cross border) in character, has dramatically expanded over the last twenty years. Despite these developments, major gaps remain. This Article examines one of the largest systemic gaps: the absence of effective tools to control the demand side of transnational bribery and corruption—the corrupt solicitation of a benefit—especially when it involves a public official.


Corrupt And Unequal, Both, Lawrence Lessig Nov 2015

Corrupt And Unequal, Both, Lawrence Lessig

Fordham Law Review

Rick Hasen has presented the issue of money in politics as if we have to make a choice: it is either a problem of equality or it is a problem of corruption. Hasen’s long and influential career in this field has been a long and patient struggle to convince those on the corruption side of the fight (we liberals, at least, and, in an important sense, we egalitarians too) to resist the temptation to try to pass—by rendering equality arguments as corruption arguments, and to just come out of the closet. Hasen had famously declared that the corruption argument supporting …


Keynote Address, Preet Bharara Nov 2015

Keynote Address, Preet Bharara

Fordham Law Review

Thank you, professor, for that introduction. It was quite the introduction. It is true my brother started a very successful online diaper company. It was mentioned that we do not have enough followers on our Twitter feed. My brother is a much more clever member of the family. My recollection is that when he started that company, he had a slogan—he and some folks came up with this slogan for the diaper company—which was—and it was emblazoned on a t-shirt which was one of the few perks of being related to somebody who started a company, and I from time …


Criminal Corruption: Why Broad Definitions Of Bribery Make Things Worse, Albert W. Alschuler Nov 2015

Criminal Corruption: Why Broad Definitions Of Bribery Make Things Worse, Albert W. Alschuler

Fordham Law Review

Although the law of bribery may look profoundly underinclusive, the push to expand it usually should be resisted. This Article traces the history of two competing concepts of bribery—the “intent to influence” concept (a concept initially applied only to gifts given to judges) and the “illegal contract” concept. It argues that, when applied to officials other than unelected judges, “intent to influence” is now an untenable standard. This standard cannot be taken literally. This Article defends the Supreme Court’s refusal to treat campaign contributions as bribes in the absence of an “explicit” quid pro quo and its refusal to read …


History, Governmental Structure, And Politics: Defining The Scope Of Local Board Of Health Power, Pekham Pal Nov 2015

History, Governmental Structure, And Politics: Defining The Scope Of Local Board Of Health Power, Pekham Pal

Fordham Law Review

Local boards of health often issue regulations that have broad effects that surpass the borders of the city or county to which they apply. Promulgation of such rules by board of health members appointed by the executive branch implicates separation of powers concerns; because such regulations may so extensively burden a locality’s citizens, it may be more appropriate for elected officials to adopt these regulations. Indeed, local businesses or other interested parties often bring suit challenging local board of health actions. Courts apply different analytical methodologies to review these challenges, which often leads to incongruent local health agency discretion for …


Opening Remarks, John D. Feerick Nov 2015

Opening Remarks, John D. Feerick

Fordham Law Review

I salute those who have been involved in the planning of this program and will be moderating, serving on panels, and making presentations throughout the day. I am not quite sure what my present qualifications are to be the opening speaker in such an august gathering of outstanding academics, teachers, lawyers, good government leaders, public servants, and others of distinction. My work these years of my life is largely in the field of social justice and poverty. I am no stranger to the field of law reform, however.


Fighting Corruption In America And Abroad, Jed Handelsman Shugerman Nov 2015

Fighting Corruption In America And Abroad, Jed Handelsman Shugerman

Fordham Law Review

The exchanges at the symposium and these Articles highlight the gap between public opinion and legal culture on the definition of corruption and the problems that flow from that gap. Teachout’s and Lessig’s legal argument that corruption can be institutional and banal roughly corresponds with the public’s moral intuition. Conversely, Lessig’s and Hasen’s intuitive moral reaction—that corruption is the evil of quid pro quo—maps onto the legal conclusion of the U.S. Supreme Court in Citizens United v. FEC that corruption is narrowly defined as quid pro quo. Note the reversal of moral and legal positions: Teachout and Lessig’s legal …


Voter Primacy, Sarah C. Haan Apr 2015

Voter Primacy, Sarah C. Haan

Fordham Law Review

This Article argues that Citizens United v. FEC expanded the audience for campaign finance disclosure to include a group that had never before been held relevant to campaign finance disclosure—corporate shareholders—and explores the constitutional, policy, and political consequences of this change. In part IV of Citizens United, the U.S. Supreme Court departed from more than thirty years of campaign finance disclosure analysis to treat corporate shareholders as a target audience for corporate electoral spending disclosure, holding that the governmental interest advanced by campaign finance disclosure laws includes an interest in helping corporate shareholders “determine whether their corporation’s political speech advances …


Justice Among The Ashes: How Government Compensation Facilities Can Bring Justice To Disaster Victims, Lindy Rouillard-Labbé Jan 2015

Justice Among The Ashes: How Government Compensation Facilities Can Bring Justice To Disaster Victims, Lindy Rouillard-Labbé

Fordham International Law Journal

No abstract provided.


The Tenth Annual A. A. Sommer, Jr. Lecture On Corporate, Securities, & Financial Law, Elisse B. Walter Jan 2010

The Tenth Annual A. A. Sommer, Jr. Lecture On Corporate, Securities, & Financial Law, Elisse B. Walter

Fordham Journal of Corporate & Financial Law

No abstract provided.


The Lawyer's Role In A Contemporary Democracy, Promoting The Rule Of Law, Government Lawyers, Democracy, And The Rule Of Law, W. Bradley Wendel Jan 2009

The Lawyer's Role In A Contemporary Democracy, Promoting The Rule Of Law, Government Lawyers, Democracy, And The Rule Of Law, W. Bradley Wendel

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Panel Discussion: Problem-Solving Mechanisms To Achieve Consensus: How Do We Ensure Successful Resolution?, Jacqueline Nolan-Haley, Cathy A. Costantino, Sean F. Nolon, Joseph A. Siegel Jan 2008

Panel Discussion: Problem-Solving Mechanisms To Achieve Consensus: How Do We Ensure Successful Resolution?, Jacqueline Nolan-Haley, Cathy A. Costantino, Sean F. Nolon, Joseph A. Siegel

Fordham Urban Law Journal

The focus of the panel discussion is problem-solving mechanisms in the public arena to ensure and achieve consensus via the question, "How do we ensure successful resolution?" Each speaker gives a 20-minute speech followed by questions from attendees. After all three speakers conclude their remarks, Professor Nolan-Haley opens the floor to general questions. Speakers include: 1. Cathy A. Constantino, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Georgetown Law School, George Washington Law School 2. Sean F. Nolon, Pace University School of Law 3. Joseph A. Siegel, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency


The Push To Private Religious Expression: Are We Missing Something?, Kathleen A. Brady Jan 2002

The Push To Private Religious Expression: Are We Missing Something?, Kathleen A. Brady

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


A Case For Fairness In Public Works Contracting, Gene Ming Lee Jan 1996

A Case For Fairness In Public Works Contracting, Gene Ming Lee

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Foreword: Legal Ethics And Government Integrity, Cyrus Vance Jan 1991

Foreword: Legal Ethics And Government Integrity, Cyrus Vance

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This foreword addresses "the need to uphold and maintain a high level of integrity in both the legal profession and in government." The author discusses the roles of self-regulation and ethical standards for ensuring integrity in the legal and governmental fields. "Public trust and confidence in lawyers and government officials alike require that members of each group strive to maintain the highest ethical standards. This issue of the Urban Law Journal contributes to our thinking about the need for and problems of preserving both government and professional integrity."


Reflections On Chairing The New York State Commission On Government Integrity, John D. Feerick Jan 1991

Reflections On Chairing The New York State Commission On Government Integrity, John D. Feerick

Fordham Urban Law Journal

"The New York State Commission on Government Integrity (Commission) was born from a sense of crisis. A series of corruption scandals in New York State, involving officials at all levels of government, produced widespread cynicism and distrust of government and created a perception that unethical, if not illegal, practices were rampant throughout the State. The scandals implicated borough presidents of New York City, political party chairmen, municipal officials, members of the State Legislature, judges and a host of other officials." Following the New York State Commission on Government Integrity's final report to Governor Mario Cuomo in September 1990, Chairman John …


The Erosion Of The Principle That The Government Must Follow Self-Imposed Rules, Rodney A. Smolla Jan 1984

The Erosion Of The Principle That The Government Must Follow Self-Imposed Rules, Rodney A. Smolla

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Professional Discipline: Unfairness And Inefficiency In The Administrative Process, Michael R. Lanzarone Jan 1983

Professional Discipline: Unfairness And Inefficiency In The Administrative Process, Michael R. Lanzarone

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


De Facto Takings And The Pursuit Of Just Compensation, Thomas S. Szatkowski Jan 1979

De Facto Takings And The Pursuit Of Just Compensation, Thomas S. Szatkowski

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


De Facto Takings And The Pursuit Of Just Compensation, Thomas S. Szatkowski Jan 1979

De Facto Takings And The Pursuit Of Just Compensation, Thomas S. Szatkowski

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Fiscal Crisis Of New York City Voluntary Hospitals, John V. Connorton Jan 1974

The Fiscal Crisis Of New York City Voluntary Hospitals, John V. Connorton

Fordham Urban Law Journal

The cost of providing health care has been rising at an accelerated pace in recent years and hospital care took the largest share of this increase. Although not officially associated with the government, the voluntary health care institution reflects some of the characteristics of a governmental unit. It is traditionally exempt from taxes (although this is recently showing signs of erosion) and derives increasing proportions of its revenues from public funds. These funds are payment for services rendered to indigents at rates far below their costs. Hospitals have resorted to cutting costs other ways attempting to maximize efficiency of their …


Notes Jan 1973

Notes

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Civil Rights- Municipalities as Parties- Waiver of Sovereign Immunity by a State does not Give a Federal Cause of Action for Damages under Sections 1983 and 1988 of the Civil Rights Act: This Note evaluates the Supreme Court's holding in Moor v. Alameda with reference to the development of sections 1983 and 1988 of the Civil Rights Act through other relevant case law, such as Monroe v. Pape and United Mine Workers v. Gibbs. It then summarizes the holding, which limits persons deprived of civil rights by a municipal employee and who are seeking damages from the municipality in federal …


Book Reviews Jan 1965

Book Reviews

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.


Congressional Power To Require Defense Expenditures, Gerald W. Davis Jan 1964

Congressional Power To Require Defense Expenditures, Gerald W. Davis

Fordham Law Review

No abstract provided.