2 Comment 75.4 Violence and Contact: Interpreting “Physical Force” in the Lautenberg Amendment John M. Skakun III BA 2005, University of Notre Dame; JD 2008, The University of Chicago Criminal Law
Comment 75.4 Pure Consumption Cases under the Federal “Crackhouse” Statute Michael E. Rayfield BA 2006, Cornell University; JD Candidate 2009, The University of Chicago Criminal Law
2 Comment 75.4 Exercising the Passive Virtues in Interpreting Civil RICO “Business or Property” Jacob Poorman BA 2003, Williams College; JD 2008, The University of Chicago Criminal Law Property Law
2 Comment 75.4 Nominal Reasonable Royalties for Patent Infringement Nathaniel C. Love BA 2001, Wesleyan University; MS 2007, PhD Candidate 2009, Stanford University; JD Candidate 2009, The University of Chicago Intellectual Property Patent Remedies
2 Comment 75.4 Trapped: Judicial Review of Municipal Agencies’ Sick Leave Policies Daniel E. Jones BA 2006, Amherst College; JD Candidate 2009, The University of Chicago Constitutional Law Labor Law
2 Comment 75.4 Assessing the Viability and Virtues of Respondeat Superior for Nonfiduciary Responsibility in ERISA Actions Bradley P. Humphreys BA 2003, The University of Virginia; JD Candidate 2009, The University of Chicago Business Organizations Financial Regulation Labor Law
2 Comment 75.4 Burden of Proof for Employee Numerosity under § 1981a Statutory Damage Caps Bryan Hart BSE, BGS 2006, University of Michigan; JD Candidate 2009, The University of Chicago Civil Procedure Civil Rights Act of 1964 Jury Trials
2 Comment 75.4 Defining the Appellate Universe: Does FRCP 52(b) Impose a Duty on Litigants? Daniel R. Fine BA 2002, The College of William & Mary; JD 2008, The University of Chicago Appellate Law Civil Procedure FRCP
2 Comment 75.4 Setting the Standard: A Fraud-based Approach to Antitrust Pleading in Standard Development Organization Cases James E. Abell III BA 2005, Vanderbilt University; JD 2008, The University of Chicago Antitrust Law Business Organizations Pleading
2 Comment 76.1 Defining “Departure” in the Context of 8 CFR § 1003.4 Marianna C. Mancusi-Ungaro BA 2004, Yale University; JD Candidate 2009, The University of Chicago Law School Deportation and Removal Immigration