2006 Cyber Crime Conference
Prosecution Responses to Internet Victimization
76 MISS L.J. 623 (2007)
Thomas K. Clancy
Director and Research Professor, National Center for Justice and the Rule of Law, University of Mississippi School of Law
Forward
Honorable M. Jane Brady
Superior Court Judge, State of Delaware
Keynote Address: Prosecution Responses to Internet Victimization
Edward M. Roche
Director of Scientific Intelligence, Information Policy Institute
Internet and Computer Related Crime: Economic and Other Harms to Organizational Entities
Cindy Southworth and Sarah Tucker
Director of Technology, National Safe & Strategic Technology Project
Technology, Stalking and Domestic Violence Victims
Kyle Duncan
Assistant Professor, University of Mississippi School of Law
Child Pornography and First Amendment Standards
Susan W. Brenner
Professor of Law and Technology, University of Dayton School of Law
Should Online Defamation be Criminalized?
Panel Discussion I
The Decision to Prosecute
Panel Discussion II
Preparing the Case After the Decision to Prosecute Has Been Made
Patrick E. Corbett
Professor, Thomas M. Cooley Law School
Prosecuting the Internet Fraud Case Without Going Broke
Panel Discussion III
Working with Corporations on Case Investigations
Donald R. Mason
Associate Direction, National Center for Justice and the Rule of Law, University of Mississippi School of Law
Sentencing Policy and Procedure as Applied to Cyber Crimes: A Call for Reconsideration and Dialogue
John F. Curran
Vice President and Deputy General Counsel, Stroz Friedberg, LLC
Internet Crime Victimization: Sentencing
Richard W. Downing
Senior Counsel, Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section, Department of Justice
Thinking Through Sentencing in Computer Hacking Cases: Did the U.S. Sentencing Commission Get it Right?
Jayne W. Barnard
Cutler Professor of Law, College of William and Mary School of Law
Creative Sanctions for Online Investment Fraud