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Table of Contents 4 (Volume 38)
(Creighton University School of Law, 2005)
Table of Contents 5 (Volume 38)
(Creighton University School of Law, 2005)
Table of Contents 1 (Volume 38)
(Creighton University School of Law, 2005)
Table of Contents 3 (Volume 38)
(Creighton University School of Law, 2005)
Title Page (Volume 38)
(Creighton University School of Law, 2005)
Ten-Second Bypass to Judicial Review: The Supreme Court of Nebraska Undermines the Knock-and-Announce Rule in State v. Lammers
(Creighton University School of Law, 2005)
INTRODUCTION|The law has long recognized that law enforcement officers executing a warrant to search a private residence are generally required to knock and announce their presence and authority before forcibly entering. ...
Eliminating a Most Convenient Forum: The Case for Restricting the Extraterritorial Operation of Neb. Rev. Stat. Section 48-115(2)(B)
(Creighton University School of Law, 2005)
INTRODUCTION|Though all states maintain some form of workers' compensation laws that purport to extend subject matter jurisdiction over those occasions where an employee is injured performing services outside the state, ...
State v. Lowe: The Supreme Court of Nebraska Correctly Determines Gender Discrimination during Jury Selection Constitutes an Equal Protection Violation Not Subject to Harmless Error Review
(Creighton University School of Law, 2005)
INTRODUCTION|The peremptory challenge system has a vast history, dating back more than two thousand years. The Romans were the first to use the peremptory challenge in 104 B.C. The modem day American jury system inherited ...
Revisiting State Marriage Recoginition Provisions
(Creighton University School of Law, 2005)
INTRODUCTION|In response to developments in Hawaii in 1993, where the state supreme court wielded a novel theory of sex discrimination to call into question the constitutionality of state marriage laws, an increasing number ...
Arthur v. Microsoft: The Supreme Court of Nebraska Sacrifices Nebraska's Antitrust Law for Indirect Purchasers to Have Standing in Antitrust Claims
(Creighton University School of Law, 2005)
INTRODUCTION|Antitrust laws are based on the strong public policy against economic power being concentrated in a small number of people. Thus, antitrust regulation seeks to protect competition and the public interest. ...