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Chapman Law Review 2007 Symposium

Miranda at 40:
Applications in a Post-Enron, Post-9/11 World

Chapman University School of Law
Friday, January 26, 2007

In 2000, the Supreme Court "re-affirmed" the validity of Miranda v. Arizona in Dickerson v. United States, which held that Congress lacked the authority to overrule Miranda through legislation because Miranda announced a constitutional rule. Since then, new issues have emerged on the Miranda landscape. While the Miranda decision has been with us for 40 years, there are constantly evolving situations in which its relevance and power continue to be tested.

This Symposium will explore questions such as whether Miranda applies to terrorism interrogations conducted abroad (as a district court held that it did in United States v. Bin Laden) and whether Miranda applies to so-called enemy combatants; whether the depictions of Miranda on television and other media are accurate and to what extent do they influence, or are influenced by, real-life criminal procedure; whether Miranda effectively shields the innocent in modern practice; and whether Sarbanes-Oxley, enacted in the wake of tremendous corporate scandals, has imposed obligations on corporate insiders to cooperate with government investigators in a way that intrudes on the right against self-incrimination.

Overall, this Symposium collects a number of scholars, commentators, and practitioners to explore unique issues regarding Miranda posed in this new Century.

It is an ideal time to reexamine Miranda issues, and following the reenactment of the Miranda oral arguments at the Chapman University School of Law during its annual Madison Lecture events on September 15, 2006, Chapman is an ideal venue for this Symposium. The Chapman Law Review welcomes your involvement in this exploration of the role of Miranda in constitutional and criminal law rules for the modern day.

Featured Luncheon Keynote Speaker:

    Honorable Edward Meese III
    THE HONORABLE EDWIN MEESE III
    Heritage Foundation Chairman of the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies and former U.S. Attorney General under President Ronald Reagan

Symposium Panelists/Moderators:

    KEITH BISHOP 
    Shareholder at Buchalter Nerner PLC and former Commissioner of Corporations for the State of California

    HENRY N. BUTLER 
    James R. Farley Professor of Economics at Chapman University and Professor of Law at Chapman University School of Law

    SHERRI L. BURR 
    Visiting Professor of Law at Chapman University School of Law

    MARISA S. CIANCIARULO 
    Assistant Professor of Law at Chapman University School of Law

    RUSSELL COVEY
    Associate Professor of Law at Whittier Law School

    M. KATHERINE B. DARMER
    Professor of Law at Chapman University School of Law and former Assistant U.S. Attorney

    ROMAN E. DARMER 
    Partner at Howrey LLP and a former Assistant U.S. Attorney

    STEVEN B. DUKE 
    Professor of Law at Yale Law School

    JIM FLEISSNER
    Professor of Law at Mercer University School of Law and Special Counsel to the Attorney General, United States v. Lewis Libby

    MARK A. GODSEY
    Associate Professor of Law at the University of Cincinnati College of Law and Faculty Director for the Lois and Richard Rosenthal for Justice and Ohio Innocence Project

    STEVE GOORVITCH 
    Attorney at O'Melveny & Myers LLP and former Staff Attorney at the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission's Division of Enforcement

    THOMAS E. HOLLIDAY 
    Partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP and co-Chair of the firm's Business Crimes and Investigations Practice Group

    SAM KAMIN
    Associate Professor of Law at University of Denver Sturm College of Law

    JANINE YOUNG KIM
    Associate Professor of Law at Southwestern Law School

    JOAN L. LARSEN
    Visiting Professor of Law at University of Michigan Law School and former Deputy Assistant Attorney General

    JEREMY M. MILLER
    Professor of Law and former Dean at Chapman University School of Law

    STEPHEN F. ROHDE
    Partner at Rohde & Victoroff and former President of ACLU of Southern California

    LAWRENCE ROSENTHAL
    Associate Professor of Law at Chapman University School of Law and former Assistant U.S. Attorney

    RONALD J. RYCHLAK
    Associate Dean of Academic Affairs and Professor of Law at the University of Mississippi

    PAUL SHECHTMAN
    Member of Stillman, Friedman & Schechtman, P.C. in New York and former Chief of the Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of New York

    J. KELLY STRADER 
    Professor of Law at Southwestern Law School and author of several legal textbooks on the subject of White Collar Crime

    MAURICE SUH
    Partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP and former Deputy Mayor of Los Angeles

Sponsored in part by:

    GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER LLP

    PAUL, HASTINGS, WALKER & JANOFSKY LLP 


    For more information, please see the attached brochure.

    To register, please contact Chapman Law Review before January 22, 2007:

    Chapman University School of Law
    Chapman Law Review
    Attn: Symposium Editor
    One University Drive
    Orange, CA 92866

    Phone: (714) 628-2582
    Fax: (714) 628-2604

    E-mail: lawreview@chapman.edu

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