Annual Symposium Speakers 2002-2010
(in Alphabetical Order)
Ronald Bacigal
Professor, University of Richmond
Making the Right Gamble: The Odds on Probable Cause
Robert Bloom
Professor, Boston College Law School
Border Searches in the Age of Terrorism
Craig M. Bradley
Professor, Indiana University
The Reasonable Policeman: Police Intent in Criminal Procedure
Susan Brenner
Professor, University of Dayton
The Fourth Amendment in an Era of Ubiquitous Technology
John Burkoff
Professor, University of Pittsburgh
“A Flame of Fire”: The Fourth Amendment in Perilous Times
Paul Butler
Professor, The George Washington University Law School
Justice Douglas' Dissent in Terry v. Ohio
Edwin J. Butterfoss
Professor, Hamline University School of Law
A. Morgan Cloud
Professor, Emory University
2002 - Rube Goldberg Meets the Constitution: The Supreme Court,
Technology and the Fourth Amendment
2003 - Quakers, Slaves and the Founders: Profiling to Save the Union
Thomas Davies
Professor, University of Tennessee School of Law
Correcting Search-and-Seizure History:Now-Forgotten Common-Law
Warrantless Arrest Standards and the Original Understanding of
“Due Process of Law”
Samuel Davis
Dean, University of Mississippi School of Law
George E. Dix
Professor, University of Texas
Subjective "Intent" as a Component of Fourth Amendment Reasonableness
Donald Dripps
Professor, University of San Diego
The Fourth Amendment and the Fallacy of Composition: Determinacy Versus Legitimacy in a Regime of Bright-Line Rules
Barry C. Feld
Professor, University of Minnesota School of Law
T.L.O.'s Unanswered Questions
Susan A. Freiwald
Professor, University of San Francisco School of Law
Electronic Surveillance at the Virtual Border
Lawrence Friedman
Associate Professor New England School of Law
Reactive and IncompletelyTheorized State Constitutional Decision-Making
Honorable Joseph Grasso
Massachusetts Appeals Court
“John Adams Made Me Do It”: Judicial Federalism,
Judicial Chauvinism, and Article 14 of Massachusetts’ Declaration of Rights
Matthew Hall
Associate Professor, University of Mississippi School of Law
Border Fiction: Does an Analogy to Immigration Law Alleviate Fourth Amendment Anxiety?
Catherine Hancock
Professor, Tulane University School of Law
Justice Harlan's Dissent in United States v. White
David Harris
Professor, University of Toledo College of Law
Using Race or Ethnicity as a Factor in Assessing the Reasonableness of Fourth Amendment Activity: Description, Yes; Prediction, No
Lewis Katz
Professor, Case Western Reserve University
Terry v. Ohio at Thirty-Five: A Revisionist View
Honorable Michael E. Keasler
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas
The Texas Experience A Case for the Lockstep Approach
Orin Kerr
Associate Professor, The George Washington University
Search Warrants in an Era of Digital Evidence
Honorable Jack Landau
Court of Appeals of Oregon
Should State Courts Depart From the Fourth Amendment?
Search and Seizure, State Constitutions, and the Oregon Experience
Mary Graw Leary
Associate Professor, The Catholic University of America
The Reasonableness of Children's Expectations of Privacy in Today's (digital) World
Debra Livingston
Professor, Columbia University
Purpose Analysis and the Wall between the Law Enforcement and Intelligence Communities
Arnold H. Loewy
Professor, Texas Tech University School of Law
Justice Marshall's Dissent in Schneckloth
Wayne A. Logan
Professor, Florida State University College of Law
Justice O'Connor's Dissent in Atwater
Tracey Maclin
Professor, Boston University
2002 - Katz, Kyllo, and Technology :Virtual Fourth Amendment
Protection in the Twenty-First Century
2003 - "Voluntary" Interviews and Airport Searches of Middle Eastern Men: The Fourth Amendment in a Time of Terror
John Palfrey
Professor, Harvard University School of Law
The Public and the Private at the United States Border with Cyberspace
Honorable Irma Raker
Court of Appeals of Maryland
Fourth Amendment and Independent State Grounds
Harvey Rishikof
Professor, National War College
Combating Terrorism in the Digital Age: A Clash of Doctrines: The Frontier of Sovereignty - National Security and Citizenship-The Fourth Amendment-Technology and Shifting Legal Borders
David Sklansky
Professor, University of California at Los Angeles
Back to the Future: Kyllo, Katz , and Common Law
Christopher Slobogin
Professor, University of Florida
2002 - Public Privacy: Camera Surveillance of Public Places and the Right to Anonymity
2005 - Transaction Surveillance by the Government
Victor Steib
Professor, Capital University School of Law
The Fourth Amendment Rights of Younger Children
Carol S. Steiker
Professor, Harvard Law School
Justice Brandeis' Dissent in Olmstead
Scott Sundby
Professor, Washington & Lee University
Protecting the Citizen "Whilst He Is Quiet": Suspicionless Searches, "Special Needs" and General Warrants
Andrew E. Taslitz
Professor, Howard University
The Expressive Fourth Amendment:Rethinking the Good Faith
Exception to the Exclusionary Rule
George C. Thomas III
Professor, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Terrorism, Race and a New Approach to Consent Searches
James Tomkovicz
Professor, University of Iowa
Technology and the Threshold of the Fourth Amendment: A Tale of Two Futures
Kathryn Urbonya
Professor, College of William & Mary
A Fourth Amendment "Search" in the Age of Technology: Postmodern Perspective
Robert Williams
Professor, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey School of Law, Camden
State Constitutional Methodology in Search and Seizure Cases
Daniel Yeager
Professor, California Western University
Overcoming Hiddenness: The Role of Intentions in Fourth Amendment Analysis