Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
Celeste J. Taylor |
KNOW WHEN TO SAY WHEN: AN EXAMINATION OF THE TAX DEDUCTION FOR ALCOHOL ADVERTISING THAT TARGETS MINORITIES |
12 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 573 (June, 1994) |
Alcohol use and abuse is pervasive in minority populations. Some commentators describe alcohol as the new liquid crack that flows through the streets of the inner city neighborhoods. The destruction that ensues from excess alcohol consumption hits hardest on the overall health of minority peoples. Per capita, the minority health risk complication... |
1994 |
Frans J. von Kaenel |
MISSOURI UPS THE ANTE IN THE DRUG FORFEITURE "RACE TO THE RES" |
72 Washington University Law Quarterly 1469 (Fall, 1994) |
Forfeiture of property under federal law is big business. To the chagrin of state lawmakers, the principal beneficiaries of the federal forfeiture bounty have been state and local law enforcement agencies. In order to increase their share of the asset forfeiture windfall, many states have enacted forfeiture provisions designed to supplant federal... |
1994 |
John P. Walters |
RACE AND THE WAR ON DRUGS |
1994 University of Chicago Legal Forum 107 (1994) |
Michael Tonry accuses those of us who formed and implemented the anti-drug policies of the Bush Administration of racism. He says that we intentionally crafted government policy so that large numbers of young black males would be arrested, and that we did this for partisan political gain. In order to contrive this calumny, Tonry misrepresents the... |
1994 |
Michael Tonry |
RACE AND THE WAR ON DRUGS |
1994 University of Chicago Legal Forum 25 (1994) |
Take no prisoners, a slogan of wars ruthlessly fought, has as its equivalent in the War on Drugs launched and conducted by the Reagan and Bush administrations, make them all prisoners. American prison and jail populations tripled between 1980 and 1993, primarily due to increased numbers of drug convictions and longer sentences for drug... |
1994 |
Knoll D. Lowney |
SMOKED NOT SNORTED: IS RACISM INHERENT IN OUR CRACK COCAINE LAWS? |
45 Washington University Journal of Urban and Contemporary Law 121 (Winter, 1994) |
There comes a time when we cannot and must not close our eyes when presented with evidence that certain laws, regardless of the purpose for which they were enacted, discriminate unfairly on the basis of race, e.g., that for the murder of a white person in Georgia, a black person is more than twice as likely as a white person to be sentenced to... |
1994 |
David Rudovsky |
THE IMPACT OF THE WAR ON DRUGS ON PROCEDURAL FAIRNESS AND RACIAL EQUALITY |
1994 University of Chicago Legal Forum 237 (1994) |
Twelve years ago, President Reagan declared yet another War on Drugs. Today, after the expenditure of billions of dollars on a policy built primarily on the coercion and punishment of drug distributors and users, the War on Drugs has failed to reduce significantly, much less eliminate, drugs as a problem in our society. There have been scattered... |
1994 |
David B. Ezra |
"GET OFF YOUR BUTTS": THE EMPLOYER'S RIGHT TO REGULATE EMPLOYEE SMOKING |
60 Tennessee Law Review 905 (Summer, 1993) |
Smokers in the workplace are the modern day lepers. In order to smoke, many are exiled into cramped smokers' lounges or pushed outside into the cold by employer policies requiring a smoke-free workplace. For others who smoke, the situation is even more grim because some employers simply refuse to hire smokers. Smokers complain that this treatment... |
1993 |
Stephen E. Hall |
A BALANCING APPROACH TO THE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF DRUG COURIER PROFILES |
1993 University of Illinois Law Review 1007 (1993) |
In an effort to win the War on Drugs, law enforcement agencies are using drug courier profiles to identify and detain persons who display characteristics that law enforcement agents believe are typical of drug traffickers. Using the reasonable suspicion standard, courts have upheld the use of these profiles against Fourth Amendment challenges.... |
1993 |
David S. Weinberg |
DIMEO v. GRIFFIN: ANOTHER RANDOM DRUG TEST OR THE LATEST INFRINGEMENT ON THE FOURTH AMENDMENT RIGHTS OF AMERICAN WORKERS? |
87 Northwestern University Law Review 1087 (Spring, 1993) |
There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment. How often, or on what system, the Thought Police plugged in on any individual wire was guesswork. It was even conceivable that they watched everybody all the time. But at any rate they could plug in your wire whenever they wanted to. You had to live--did live,... |
1993 |
Patricia A. Sexton |
IMPOSING CRIMINAL SANCTIONS ON PREGNANT DRUG USERS: THROWING THE BABY OUT WITH THE BATH WATER |
32 Washburn Law Journal 410 (Spring, 1993) |
I. Introduction. 410 II. History of Charging Women With Drug Use During Pregnancy. 412 III. History of Fetal Rights. 414 IV. How Drug Abuse Affects the Fetus. 416 V. Legal and Ethical Issues of the Medical Community Concerning Criminal Sanctions. 419 VI. Mandatory Reporting and Discrimination: Inherently Linked. 422 VII. The General Rule: Drug... |
1993 |
David Schultz |
RETHINKING DRUG CRIMINALIZATION POLICIES |
25 Texas Tech Law Review 151 (1993) |
I. Introduction II. Justifying Criminalization III. Drug Usage and Enforcement in America IV. Social Costs of Drug Criminalization V. Alternative Policy Prescriptions VI. Conclusion In the first 1992 presidential debate among George Bush, Bill Clinton, and Ross Perot, a reporter asked the candidates about alternative strategies to address the drug... |
1993 |
Chris Braeske |
THE DRUG WAR COMES TO A HIGHWAY NEAR YOU: POLICE POWER TO EFFECTUATE HIGHWAY "NARCOTICS CHECKPOINTS" UNDER THE FEDERAL AND STATE CONSTITUTIONS |
11 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 449 (June, 1993) |
On the night of July 30, 1992, law enforcement authorities set up a narcotics checkpoint on Interstate 35W south of Minneapolis, Minnesota, randomly stopping 650 cars. This checkpoint led to drug charges against seven people for possessing small amounts of marijuana. While Minnesota authorities have previously used this tactic to facilitate... |
1993 |
Randall H. Stoner , Member of the Class of 1992 |
200 MPH CIGARETTE ADS: A COMPARISON OF INTERNATIONAL RESTRICTIONS ON TOBACCO SPORTS SPONSORSHIP |
15 Hastings International and Comparative Law Review 639 (Summer, 1992) |
Gentlemen start your engines! These famous words traditionally start the Indianapolis 500. They also ring out at race tracks across the world to signal the start of other races. Almost every weekend from February to November, races put on by the major motorsports sanctioning bodiesFISA (Federation Internationale du Sport Automobile), NASCAR... |
1992 |
Sandra Anderson Garcia, Ph.D., J.D. |
DRUG ADDICTION AND MOTHER/CHILD WELFARE |
13 Journal of Legal Medicine 129 (June, 1992) |
The convergence of several events over the past 10 years has resulted in heightened awareness of the harmful effects of drugs and drug addiction on developing fetuses. Many persons learned about the cocaine baby problem from the widely cited and disputed survey done in 1988 that concluded that if hospitals drug tested every baby they delivered,... |
1992 |
Douglas L. Stanley |
EMPLOYEE DRUG TESTING |
61-JAN Journal of the Kansas Bar Association 19 (January, 1992) |
In the last five years, few societal problems have received more publicity or discussion than the war on drugs. This war has seen an increasing number of employers testing applicants and employees for drug use. A recent nationwide survey conducted by the American Management Society found that 63 percent of the companies surveyed now engaged in... |
1992 |
Michael D. Weiss |
THE POOR TAX REVISITED: THE EFFECTS OF SHIFTING THE BURDEN OF INVESTIGATING DRUG CRIMES TO LENDERS |
70 Texas Law Review 717 (February, 1992) |
Under the new forfeiture guidelines promulgated pursuant to section 881 of the Controlled Substances Act, a bank that lends money to a drug dealer is at risk of forfeiting the pledged collateral unless it attempted to determine beforehand whether the individual was a drug dealer. If the bank's security interest is to be valid, the bank must meet... |
1992 |
Kathryn A. Kelly |
THE TARGET MARKETING OF ALCOHOL AND TOBACCO BILLBOARDS TO MINORITY COMMUNITIES |
5 University of Florida Journal of Law and Public Policy 33 (Fall, 1992) |
Drive through Black or Hispanic neighborhoods in most cities and you're likely to see big billboards right next to homes and churches and across the street from schools and parks - most of them advertising cigarettes and booze. Carl Rowan Syndicated Columnist I. INTRODUCTION. 34 II. COMMERCIAL SPEECH. 35 A. Commercial Speech Within First Amendment... |
1992 |
Diane-Michele Krasnow |
TO STOP THE SCOURGE: THE SUPREME COURT'S APPROACH TO THE WAR ON DRUGS |
19 American Journal of Criminal Law 219 (Winter, 1992) |
I. Introduction. 220 II. The War on Drugs. 222 III. The Fourth Amendment. 225 A. Judicial Review of Police Practices. 227 1. The Post-Terry Standard. 227 2. Drug Courier Profiles. 229 a. Profile background. 229 b. Supreme Court treatment. 231 c. Analysis. 234 3. Sobriety Checkpoints. 234 a. Highway checkpoints: Background. 235 b. Battling drunk... |
1992 |
Laura A. Lundquist |
WEIGHING THE FACTORS OF DRUG TESTING FOR FOURTH AMENDMENT BALANCING |
60 George Washington Law Review 1151 (June, 1992) |
In 1989 the United States Supreme Court upheld mandatory drug testing programs for the first time in Skinner v. Railway Labor Executives' Ass'n and National Treasury Employees Union v. Von Raab. These two seminal cases established a balancing test for determining whether a drug testing program is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment. This... |
1992 |
Dwight L. Greene |
ABUSIVE PROSECUTORS: GENDER, RACE & CLASS DISCRETION AND THE PROSECUTION OF DRUG-ADDICTED MOTHERS |
39 Buffalo Law Review 737 (Fall, 1991) |
It came as a shock . . . and then I was pretty angry. Addiction is a medical problem. You wouldn't put a heart patient in jail for having a heart attack. And you wouldn't prosecute an epileptic for having a seizure. . . . It's been a nightmare! . . . My baby was taken away from his mother for the first ten months of his life; there was no bonding... |
1991 |
Julie Petrow |
ADDICTED MOTHERS, DRUG-EXPOSED BABIES: THE UNPRECEDENTED PROSECUTION OF MOTHERS UNDER DRUG-TRAFFICKING STATUTES |
36 New York Law School Law Review 573 (1991) |
It is estimated by the National Association of Perinatal Addiction Research and Education (NAPARE) that eleven percent of women use drugs during pregnancy, resulting in 375,000 births of drug-exposed infants annually. As frightening as these statistics are, the individual accounts of the pervasive problem of pregnant drug abusers are even more... |
1991 |
Kenneth R. Hillier |
BEYOND THE WAR ON DRUGS: OVERCOMING A FAILED PUBLIC POLICY. BY STEVEN WISOTSKY. BUFFALO: PROMETHEUS BOOKS. 1990. PP. XLII, 279. $16.95 |
89 Michigan Law Review 1809 (May, 1991) |
We need, fully and completely, to marshal the nation's energy and intelligence in a true all-out war against drugs. We can and must win that war. -President-elect George Bush In Beyond the War on Drugs, Steven Wisotsky attempts to overcome the popular conception that illegal drugs represent a menace to society against which the nation must wage... |
1991 |
Jodi Sax |
DRUG COURIER PROFILES, AIRPORT STOPS AND THE INHERENT UNREASONABLENESS OF THE REASONABLE SUSPICION STANDARD AFTER UNITED STATES v. SOKOLOW |
25 Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 321 (November, 1991) |
In United States v. Sokolow, the United States Supreme Court concluded that a drug enforcement agent may stop a suspect based on a standard of reasonable suspicion if, considering a totality of the circumstances, the agent believes the suspect to be engaged in illegal drug related activity. In so holding, the Court sanctioned the use of a drug... |
1991 |
John A. Powell , Eileen B. Hershenov |
HOSTAGE TO THE DRUG WAR: THE NATIONAL PURSE, THE CONSTITUTION AND THE BLACK COMMUNITY |
24 U.C. Davis Law Review 557 (Spring, 1991) |
In 1982, former President Ronald Reagan declared war on drugs. Six years later, in response to polls showing that Americans considered drug use the number one domestic problem, his successor, George Bush, vowed to wage the war with renewed vigor. Over the course of the past eight years and in apparent belief that where there's war there must be... |
1991 |
Dorothy E. Roberts |
PUNISHING DRUG ADDICTS WHO HAVE BABIES: WOMEN OF COLOR, EQUALITY, AND THE RIGHT OF PRIVACY |
104 Harvard Law Review 1419 (May, 1991) |
Women increasingly face criminal charges for giving birth to infants who test positive for drugs. Most of the women prosecuted are poor, Black, and addicted to crack cocaine. In this Article, Professor Roberts seeks to add the perspective of poor Black women to the current debate over protecting fetal rights at the expense of women's rights. Based... |
1991 |
Frank J. Vandall |
REALLOCATING THE COSTS OF SMOKING: THE APPLICATION OF ABSOLUTE LIABILITY TO CIGARETTE MANUFACTURERS |
52 Ohio State Law Journal 405 (1991) |
Cigarette-induced death and illness is one of the most important and costly health problems facing society. Each year smoking kills 350,000 persons. This yearly death toll exceeds the total number of Americans killed in World War I, the Korean War, and Vietnam. In comparison to other critical health problems, AIDS has killed a total of 60,000 and... |
1991 |
Li-Hsien Rin-laures , Diane Janofsky |
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS CONCERNING THE ORPHAN DRUG ACT |
4 Harvard Journal of Law & Technology 269 (Spring, 1991) |
Many citizens of the United States grapple with illness every day. Some illnesses, like asthma, have a relatively high patient population. Other illnesses, like Tourettee's Syndrome, a neurological disorder, are rare. Pharmaceutical companies invest substantial amounts into the research and development of treatments for the more prevalent diseases... |
1991 |
Sidney J. Spaeth |
THE TWENTY-FIRST AMENDMENT AND STATE CONTROL OVER INTOXICATING LIQUOR: ACCOMMODATING THE FEDERAL INTEREST |
79 California Law Review 161 (January, 1991) |
In recent years, the Supreme Court has begun diluting the twenty-first amendment. The twenty-first amendment implemented the hard-fought lesson of liquor's tumultuous past in this country: liquor control has to be local to be effective. Although the Court has been abandoning its earlier deference to state liquor statutes, it has continued to speak... |
1991 |
Deborah A. Wainey |
THE USE OF JUVENILE COURT JURISDICTION AND RESTRAINING AUTHORITY TO ADDRESS THE PROBLEM OF MATERNAL DRUG ABUSE IN OHIO |
17 Ohio Northern University Law Review 611 (1991) |
Fetal rights have increasingly been the focus of legal scrutiny in the past several years. Fetal protection policies are one example of attempts to protect unborn children. Although fetal protection policies have caused a stir in the employment arena, fetal rights may well prove to be an even bigger issue in the context of maternal drug abuse. The... |
1991 |
Joseph L. Galiber |
A BILL TO REPEAL CRIMINAL DRUG LAWS: REPLACING PROHIBITION WITH REGULATION |
18 Hofstra Law Review 831 (Spring, 1990) |
Conventional wisdom obliges elected officials to beat the narcodrums loudly and incessantly, and to demand increasingly harsh criminal penalties for the sale and use of illegal drugs. It is reasonable to wonder why I, a senator, would dare submit a bill to the New York State Legislature which would regulate all drugs currently proscribed as illegal... |
1990 |
Mark A. Conrad |
BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK v. FOX -- THE DAWN OF A NEW AGE OF COMMERCIAL SPEECH REGULATION OF TOBACCO AND ALCOHOL |
9 Cardozo Arts and Entertainment Law Journal 61 (1990) |
Four decades ago, the late Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black observed that a door-to-door seller of pots or other gadgets has no constitutional right to hawk his wares. Justice Black's dicta, reflecting a prevailing legal truism even to this first amendment absolutist, echoed a long-standing belief that commercial speech was not protected under the... |
1990 |
Marie-Andree Bertrand |
CREATION OF AN INTERNATIONAL ANTI-PROHIBITIONIST LEAGUE IN THE FIELD OF DRUGS |
18 Hofstra Law Review 881 (Spring, 1990) |
On March 31, 1989, forty-five legal experts, sociologists, psychiatrists, criminologists, magistrates and journalists, from fifteen different countries and three continents, gathered in Rome and founded the International Anti-prohibitionist League (IAL). The IAL's objective, as its name indicates, is to work toward the repeal of criminal laws... |
1990 |
Kerrie S. Covell , Annette Gibbs |
DRUG TESTING AND THE COLLEGE ATHLETE |
23 Creighton Law Review 1 (1989/1990) |
Drugs have become a destructive force in the lives of countless Americans. The 1980's was an era of intense struggle with the drug abuse issue. Instigated at least in part by the Reagan administration's campaign against drug use, the war against drugs has been fought by parents, legislators, judges, and employers. Indeed, the Bush administration... |
1990 |
Dwight L. Greene |
FOREWORD |
18 Hofstra Law Review 457 (Spring, 1990) |
Coke is just a way for me to make some money and do some of the things I would otherwise not have the chance of doing . [S]elling coke is just like any other business-you gotta work hard, stay on your toes, protect what's yours, and not f_ up with silly matters. In America you gotta have money . because that's what people respect.' Masterrap, a... |
1990 |
Gregory A. Loken , James Kennedy, M.D. |
LEGAL COCAINE AND KIDS: THE VERY BITTERNESS OF SHAME |
18 Hofstra Law Review 567 (Spring, 1990) |
I have prayed with drops of agony on my Brow, trembling not only before the Justice of my Maker, but even before the Mercy of my Redeemer. I gave thee so many Talents. What hast thou done with them? [N]ot only to friends have I stated the whole Case with tears & the very bitterness of shame; but in two instances I have warned young men, mere... |
1990 |
Michael Z. Letwin |
REPORT FROM THE FRONT LINE: THE BENNETT PLAN, STREET-LEVEL DRUG ENFORCEMENT IN NEW YORK CITY AND THE LEGALIZATION DEBATE |
18 Hofstra Law Review 795 (Spring, 1990) |
In September, 1989, the Bush administration presented its National Drug Control Strategy-popularly known as the Bennett Plan.' The Plan vociferously rejected drug legalization and, like every other federal drug war program since the Nixon administration, devoted seventy percent of the Plan's proposed resources to law enforcement, including... |
1990 |
Martha A. Myers |
SYMBOLIC POLICY AND THE SENTENCING OF DRUG OFFENDERS |
23 Law and Society Review 295 (1989) |
This paper examines the sentencing behavior of judges in a context characterized by significant legislative and social change. Data from Georgia are used to explore the ways in which judges accommodated their sentencing practices to a general crusade against drug use and to specific legislation that identified trafficking as criminal, set harsh... |
1989 |
James Felman , Christopher J. Petrini |
DRUG TESTING AND PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT: TOWARD A RATIONAL APPLICATION OF THE FOURTH AMENDMENT |
51-WTR Law and Contemporary Problems 253 (Winter, 1988) |
C1-3TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Introduction. 254 II. The Lines of Battle: Drug Use and Drug Testing in the Public Workplace. 256 A. The Nature and Scope of the American Drug Problem. 256 1. How Many Drug Users Are There?. 256 2. At What Cost?. 257 B. The Employers' Response: The Use and Variety of Drug Testing. 259 1. The Increased Implementation of Drug... |
1988 |
Michael R. O'Donnell |
EMPLOYEE DRUG TESTING-BALANCING THE INTERESTS IN THE WORKPLACE: A REASONABLE SUSPICION STANDARD |
74 Virginia Law Review 969 (August, 1988) |
In the 1980s, courts, legislatures, and scholars have struggled with the issue of employee drug testing. Although drug abuse should not be tolerated in the workplace, there must be some limit to testing and the invasion of privacy testing entails. In 1987, seven states enacted drug-testing laws. Nine federal judicial circuits have decided employee... |
1988 |
Larry Kraft |
SMOKING IN PUBLIC PLACES: LIVING WITH A DYING CUSTOM |
64 North Dakota Law Review 329 (1988) |
Smoking harms smokers. That fact is universally accepted and was established at least a century ago. Within the last two years the Surgeon General reported as fact that smoking also harms nonsmokers. That report, supported by over 300 pages of scientific evidence, is the impetus for what could be a massive wave of nonsmokers' rights cases. The... |
1988 |
Jeannette C. James |
THE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF FEDERAL EMPLOYEE DRUG TESTING: NATIONAL TREASURY EMPLOYEES UNION v. VON RAAB |
38 American University Law Review 109 (Fall, 1988) |
Increasing national concern over the abuse of drugs in the United States has prompted an onslaught of employee testing programs to detect and prevent the use of drugs in the federal workplace. Since the early 1980s, a national consensus condemning drug use has gained momentum. As a result, there is a growing trend toward judicial deference to... |
1988 |
Sally Lynn Meloch |
AN ANALYSIS OF PUBLIC COLLEGE ATHLETE DRUG TESTING PROGRAMS THROUGH THE UNCONSTITUTIONAL CONDITION DOCTRINE AND THE FOURTH AMENDMENT |
60 Southern California Law Review 815 (March, 1987) |
The collegiate sports world was shocked on June 19, 1986, when University of Maryland basketball star Len Bias, the first-round draft pick of the national champion Boston Celtics, died suddenly. The cause of death was heart failure resulting from an overdose of cocaine. Eight days later, on June 27, 1986, the sports world was shocked again by the... |
1987 |
Michael J. Hudock, III |
BEHIND THE HYSTERIA OF COMPULSORY DRUG SCREENING IN EMPLOYMENT: URINALYSIS CAN BE A LEGITIMATE TOOL FOR HELPING RESOLVE THE NATION'S DRUG PROBLEM IF COMPETING INTERESTS OF EMPLOYER AND EMPLOYEE ARE EQUITABLY BALANCED |
25 Duquesne Law Review 597 (Summer, 1987) |
The damnable character of illicit drugs should not blind our eyes to the mischief which will surely follow any attempt to destroy them by unwarranted methods. To press forward to a great principle by breaking through every other great principle that stands in the way of its establishment; . . . in short, to procure an eminent good by means that... |
1987 |
Thomas L. McGovern III |
EMPLOYEE DRUG TESTING LEGISLATION: REDRAWING THE BATTLELINES IN THE WAR ON DRUGS |
39 Stanford Law Review 1453 (July, 1987) |
American business has become an important ally of the Reagan Administration in its war on drug abuse. Some observers suggest that a request by a potential employer for a drug test will soon be as common as a request for a job reference. Drug testing may provide employers with information to make the workplace a safer and more productive place,... |
1987 |
Charles L. Becton |
THE DRUG COURIER PROFILE: 'ALL SEEMS INFECTED THAT TH' INFECTED SPY, AS ALL LOOKS YELLOW TO THE JAUNDIC'D EYE' |
65 North Carolina Law Review 417 (March, 1987) |
To combat the rising tide of illegal drugs in this country, agents of the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) have developed the drug courier profile. The profile consists of numerous factors or characteristics that purportedly signal the agent whether a particular airline passenger carries drugs on his or her person. Relying on the profile, agents... |
1987 |
John M. Husband, This review is prepared by the Labor Law Section of the Colorado Bar Association to present current issues and topics of interest to members of the bar as both legal practitioners and employers. This month's column was written by Column E |
DRUG AND ALCOHOL ABUSE IN THE WORKPLACE |
15 Colorado Lawyer 31 (January, 1986) |
Drug and alcohol abuse have been part of American life for a long time. However, only recently have they gained recognition as problems of such staggering proportions. In the workplace, such abuse can cause lost jobs, moral problems, illnesses, injuries and deaths. In economic terms, losses include property damage, absenteeism, lost productivity,... |
1986 |
Robert H. Horn |
SHOEMAKER v. HANDEL: ALCOHOL AND DRUG TESTING AND THE PERVASIVE REGULATION EXCEPTION TO THE FOURTH AMENDMENT'S ADMINISTRATIVE SEARCH WARRANT REQUIREMENT |
14 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 173 (Fall, 1986) |
Alcohol and drug abuse is a problem of enormous proportions. Drug abuse alone costs American society nearly sixty billion dollars annually. In a rare joint address to the nation, President Reagan and his wife, Nancy Reagan, warned of a drug and alcohol abuse epidemic in this country. Drug testing has emerged as an important tool to combat drug... |
1986 |
Michael Caudell-Feagan, Daniel Warshawsky |
SERVICE-CONNECTION AND DRUG-RELATED OFFENSES: THE MILITARY COURTS' EVER-EXPANDING JURISDICTION |
54 George Washington Law Review 118 (November, 1985) |
The military community in the United States now consists of over two million volunteers. If any of these servicemembers are accused of a crime, their only judicial recourse may be to courts-martial: a system of military courts created under Congress's Article I powers, independent ofand with limited review byArticle III courts. This judicial... |
1985 |
Pamela Reasor Hanebutt |
EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION-AMERICAN TOBACCO CO. v. PATTERSON: SECTION 703(H) OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT OF 1964 EXTENDS A "MEASURE OF IMMUNITY" TO SENIORITY SYSTEMS ADOPTED AFTER THE ENACTMENT OF TITLE VII |
58 Tulane Law Review 386 (October, 1983) |
John Patterson, a black male, brought suit against his employer, the American Tobacco Company, and the Tobacco Workers' International Union, alleging racial discrimination in hiring and promotional practices in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The district court found that although the petitioners' current hiring practices... |
1983 |
Steven Wisotsky |
EXPOSING THE WAR ON COCAINE: THE FUTILITY AND DESTRUCTIVENESS OF PROHIBITION |
1983 Wisconsin Law Review 1305 (1983) |
Introduction I. The Role of the Law in the Black Market in Cocaine A. The Rise and Fall and Rise of Cocaine in the United States B. Measuring the Black Market in Cocaine C. The Economics of the Black Market in Cocaine II. The Structure of the Cocaine Industry A. Production Abroad B. Importation, Distribution, Money-Laundering III. The Law... |
1983 |