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Journal

Fordham Urban Law Journal

2006

Accounting Law

Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Law

"Reasonably Predictable:" The Reluctance To Embrace Judicial Discretion For Substantial Assistance Procedures, India Geronimo Jan 2006

"Reasonably Predictable:" The Reluctance To Embrace Judicial Discretion For Substantial Assistance Procedures, India Geronimo

Fordham Urban Law Journal

In United States v. Booker, the Supreme Court held that the Federal Sentencing Guidelines are no longer mandatory, yet still instructed sentencing courts to continue to advise the Guidelines. In light of this expanded judicial discretion, post-Booker cooperation, or 5K1.1, motions made by the government are of particular interest because it can have the potential to increase the court’s power while simultaneously limiting a prosecutor’s discretion by departing from the guidelines without any motion made from the government. While most appellate courts have been reluctant to affirm sentences that have been substantially departed from the guidelines in the absence of …


Medicinal Marijuana And Palliative Care: Carving A Liberty Interest Out Of The Glucksberg Framework , Adam Hyatt Jan 2006

Medicinal Marijuana And Palliative Care: Carving A Liberty Interest Out Of The Glucksberg Framework , Adam Hyatt

Fordham Urban Law Journal

In Gonzales v. Raich, the Supreme Court vacated the Ninth Circuit’s decision and held that the Controlled Substances Act was not an unconstitutional exercise of the Commerce Clause, yet never reached the substantive due process claim or the medical necessity. This Comment assesses whether there is a right to palliative care and focuses on the substantive due process claim available to the plaintiffs on remand. This Comment argues that, in view of the Court’s precedents, there is a right, subject to limitations, to use last-resort medical marijuana. In addition, the author determines that there is a fundamental right to palliative …


Subtle But Pervasive: Discrimination Against Mothers & Pregnant Women In The Workplace, Alison A. Reuter Jan 2006

Subtle But Pervasive: Discrimination Against Mothers & Pregnant Women In The Workplace, Alison A. Reuter

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This Comment examines discrimination against mothers in the workplace, including discrimination against women on the basis of pregnancy, childcare, and breast-feeding, and proposes that new legislation is necessary in order to create equal opportunities for men and women, at work and at home. The Parental Discrimination Act (PDA) specifically tries to remedy the embedded assumptions and biases that lie beneath discrimination against pregnant women and mothers. Yet, until the embedded assumptions and biases that form the basis for the current work-family structure are eradicated, women and men will not be able to enjoy equal opportunities both at work and at …


The Death Penalty And The Debate Over The U.S. Supreme Court’S Citation Of Foreign And International Law, Yitzchok Segal Jan 2006

The Death Penalty And The Debate Over The U.S. Supreme Court’S Citation Of Foreign And International Law, Yitzchok Segal

Fordham Urban Law Journal

The appropriateness of using foreign and international law in interpreting the U.S. Constitution has spawned passionate rhetoric and an ever-growing body of literature. Yet, the Supreme Court’s use of foreign and international law in interpreting the Constitution is not itself revolutionary, as the Court has freely drawn on supranational law throughout history. It is not the Court’s mere use of comparative legal sources that has sparked the recent debate, it is the context of these references. The Court has recently cited foreign and international law to support key positions in high-profile cases dealing with hyper-sensitive domestic issues, including the death …


“Special Delivery:” Where Do National Security Letters Fit Into The Fourth Amendment?, Lauren M. Weiner Jan 2006

“Special Delivery:” Where Do National Security Letters Fit Into The Fourth Amendment?, Lauren M. Weiner

Fordham Urban Law Journal

After the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Congress passed the USA PATRIOT Act to aid law enforcement efforts to fight terrorism and broadened the scope of certain investigatory tools. One such tool, National Security Letters (NSLs), gives the government the authority to request certain types of transactional records without requiring judicial pre-approval and without giving the recipient a meaningful method to challenge it. This Comment examines NSLs both in the context of foreign intelligence and domestic criminal investigations and is primarily focused on how to classify NSLs and how to use them in a manner that reduces the potential …