Volume 71, Issue 1 (2005)
SYMPOSIUM:
Crawford and Beyond: Exploring The Future of the Confrontation Clause in Light of its Past
Articles
Introduction to the Symposium
Robert M. Pitler
What Did the Framers Know, and When Did They Know It? Fictional Originalism in Crawford v. Washington
Thomas Y. Davies
The Too-Easy Historical Assumptions of Crawford v. Washington
Randolph N. Jonakait
Legal History for a Dummy: A Comment on the Role of History in Judicial Interpretation of the Confrontation Clause
Peter Tillers
Grappling with the Meaning of "Testimonial"
Richard D. Friedman
From "Reliability" to Uncertainty: Difficulties Inherent in Interpreting and Applying the New Crawford Standard
Paul L. Shechtman
Remember the Ladies and the Children Too: Crawford's Impact on Domestic Violence and Child Abuse Cases
Myrna Raeder
Yes, Virginia, There Is a Confrontation Clause
Tom Lininger
Crawford's Impact on Hearsay Statements in Domestic Violence and Child Sexual Abuse Cases
Robert P. Mosteller
Notes
Sarbanes-Oxley and Small Business: Section 404 and the Case for a Small Business Exemption
Joseph A. Castelluccio, III
A Classless Act: The Ninth Circuit's Erroneous Class Certification in Dukes v. Wal-Mart, Inc.
Aaron B. Lauchheimer