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Friday, April 21, 2006
9:00am
WELCOME
Carol S. Steiker (Harvard Law School), Editor, Criminal Procedure Stories
9:30 - 10:30
PANEL ONE: RACE-BASED PROSECUTION AND PROFILING
Author, Michael J. Klarman (Harvard Law School), Powell v. Alabama: The Supreme Court Confronts "Legal Lynchings"
Author, Bernard E. Harcourt (University of Chicago Law School), United States v. Brignoni-Ponce and
United States v. Martinez-Fuerte:The Road to Racial Profiling
Commentator, R. Richard Banks (Stanford Law School)
Commentator, Kim Forde-Mazrui (University of Virginia School of Law)
Moderator, Randall L. Kennedy (Harvard Law School)
10:30 - 10:40
BREAK
10:40 - 11:40
PANEL TWO: THE EXCLUSIONARY RULE
Author, Yale Kamisar (University of San Diego School of Law), Mapp v. Ohio:The First Shot Fired in
Warren Court's Criminal Procedure Revolution
Commentator, Craig Bradley (Indiana University School of Law)
Commentator, Carolyn N. Long (Washington State University, Vancouver, Criminal Justice Department)
Moderator, Daniel J. Meltzer (Harvard Law School)
11:40 - 11:50
BREAK
11:50 - 12:50
PANEL THREE: POLICE INTERROGATION
Author, Stephen J. Schulhofer (NYU School of Law), Miranda v. Arizona: A Modest But Important Legacy
Commentator, Richard A. Leo (University of California, Irvine, Deptartment of Criminology, Law & Society)
Commentator, George Thomas (Rutgers School of Law)
Moderator, Llody L. Weinreb (Harvard Law School)
12:50 - 2:00
BREAK FOR LUNCH (lunch not provided)
2:00 - 3:00
PANEL FOUR: COUNSEL IN CRIMINAL CASES
Author, David D. Cole (Georgetown University Law Center), Gideon v. Wainwright and Strickland
v. Washington:Broken Promises
Commentator, Stephen B. Bright (Southern Center for Human Rights, Atlanta, GA)
Commentator, Ronald S. Sullivan (Yale Law School)
Moderator, Charles J. Ogletree (Harvard Law School)
3:00 - 3:10
BREAK
3:10 - 4:10
PANEL FIVE: INFORMANTS AND WIRETAPPING
Author, Tracey Maclin (Boston University School of Law), Hoffa v. United States:Secret Agents
in Private Spaces
Author, David A. Sklansky (University of California, Berkeley, School of Law - Boalt Hall),
Katz v. United States: The Limits of Aphorism
Commentator, Philip B. Heymann (Harvard Law School)
Commentator, Orin S. Kerr (George Washington University Law School)
Commentator, Andrew E. Taslitz (Howard University School of Law)
Moderator, David Poole (Harvard Law School, Criminal Justice Institute)
4:10 - 4:20
BREAK
4:20-5:20
PANEL SIX:PREVENTIVE DETENTION
Author, Daniel Richman (Fordham Law School), United States v. Salerno:The Constitutionality of
Regulatory Detention
Commentator, Alan M. Dershowitz (Harvard Law School)
Commentator, Erin Murphy (University of California, Berkeley, Boalt Hall School of Law)
Commentator, Jordan M. Steiker (University of Texas School of Law)
Moderator, William J. Stuntz (Harvard Law School)
Saturday, April 22, 2006
9:30 - 10:30
PANEL SEVEN: JURY SELECTION
Author, Pamela S. Karlan (Stanford Law School), Batson v. Kentucky:The Constitutional Challenges of
Peremptory Challenges
Commentator, Eric L. Muller (University of North Carolina School of Law)
Commentator, Barbara Underwood (U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of New York)
Moderator, Jill Soffiyah-Elijah (Harvard Law School, Criminal Justice Institute)
10:30 - 10:40
BREAK
10:40 - 11:40
PANEL EIGHT: JURY TRIAL
Author, Nancy J. King (Vanderbilt University School of Law), Duncan v. Louisiana: How Bigotry in the Bayou Led to
the Federal Regulation of State Juries
Commentator, Jerold H. Israel (University of Florida, Levin College of Law)
Commentator, Neil Vidmar (Duke Law School)
Moderator, Adriaan Lanni (Harvard Law School)
11:40 - 11:50
BREAK
11:50 - 12:50
PANEL NINE: POLICE STOPS ON THE STREET
Author, John Q. Barrett (St. John's University School of Law), Terry v. Ohio:The Fourth Amendment
Reasonableness of Police Stops and Frisks Based on Less Than Probable Cause
Commentator, Earl C. Dudley, Jr. (University of Virginia School of Law)
Commentator, Christopher Slobogin (University of Florida, Levin College of Law)
Moderator, Richard D. Parker (Harvard Law School)
12:50 - 2:00
BREAK FOR LUNCH (lunch not provided)
2:00 - 3:15
PANEL TEN:THE REVOLUATION IN PLEA BARGAINING AND SENTENCING
Author, Kate Stith (Yale Law School), United States v. Mistretta: The Constitution and the
Sentencing Guidelines
Author, William J. Stuntz (Harvard Law School), Bordenkircher v. Hayes: Plea Bargaining and the
Decline of the Rule of Law
Commentator, The Honorable Nancy Gertner (U.S. District Judge, District of Massachusetts)
Commentator, The Honorable Gerard E. Lynch (U.S. District Judge, Southern District of New York)
Moderator, Carol S. Steiker (Harvard Law School)
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