User:Ohtani MVP/Criminal law of the United States/Bibliography

Main Secondary Source

[https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/csulb/detail.action?docID=1446709&pq-origsite=primo Nemeth, Charles P. Criminal Law. Second edition. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 201] 2. Criminal Law, Second Edition blends legal and moral reasoning in the examination of crimes and explores the history. Provides easy disgustable definitions of laws and they're place in American law.

Dale, Elizabeth''. Criminal Justice in the United States 1789-1939 .'' Cambridge University Press, 2011. Criminal Justice in the United States could be very useful for the background sections on the difference between federal and state powers. Could also be useful for definitions as stated before in criminal law and precedents

Jefferson, Michael. Criminal Law. 12th Edition. Pearson Education Limited, 2015. This book is focused on criminal law as a whole and provides information on crimes and what definitions they may care. Could be very useful to make citations needed in the article.

US Codes

18 U.S. Code Part I - CRIMES

This is the publicly available online version of the penal codes for Crimes found in federal law. The Cornell Law School's Legal Information Institute provides these legal resources index and continues to update the website as laws change in their primary source sections. All laws have important background information of cases and precedents.

18 U.S. Code Chapter 103 - ROBBERY AND BURGLARY

This is the publicly available online version of the penal codes for specifically robbery and burglary found in federal law. The Cornell Law School's Legal Information Institute provides these codes and is directly from federal statutes which it provides as a citation below. The source is primary. The Legal Information Institute tends to update the website as laws change. All laws have condense version of the laws.

18 U.S. Code § 1201 - Kidnapping

This is the publicly available online version of the penal codes for specifically kidnapping found in federal law. The Cornell Law School's Legal Information Institute provides these codes and is directly from federal statutes which it provides as a citation below. This is the page for just kidnapping and not the umbrella of the section. The definition of kidnapping is clearly defined and sourced. The source is primary. The Legal Information Institute tends to update the website as laws change.

State Regulations

This is the publicly available index for State Regulations that can display differences in criminal law as the United States criminal law works as a state/federal balance. The Legal Information Institute provides these legal resources index and continues to update the website as laws change in their primary source sections. The index provides many subsections and are well source to the original laws.

California Codes Codes: Codes Tree - Penal Code - PEN (ca.gov)

This is the publicly available online version of the penal codes of California that is kept up to date as new legislation alters it. In these sets of codes, you would find most of the commonly known criminal laws, such as robbery, murder, burglary, etc.

Codes: Codes Tree - Vehicle Code - VEH (ca.gov)

This is the publicly available online version of the vehicle codes of California that is kept up to date as new legislation alters it. In these sets of codes, you would find the laws of the road and vehicle regulations as well as crimes like driving under the influence (DUI).

Codes: Codes Tree - Health and Safety Code - HSC (ca.gov)

This is the publicly available online version of the health and safety codes of California that is kept up to date as new legislation alters it. In these sets of codes, you would find laws related to suicide and drug laws.

[https://open.lib.umn.edu/criminallaw/ Criminal Law. University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing, 2015.]

This is a general criminal justice textbook commonly used for undergraduate students and published by the University of Minnesota.

General Knowledge Terms https://www.cliffsnotes.com/study-guides/criminal-justice/criminal-law/sources-of-criminal-law

This source talks about the basics of criminal law defined under the subject of Criminal Justice.

Harris, Lisa H., and Lynn Paltrow. “The Status of Pregnant Women and Fetuses in US Criminal Law.” JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 289, no. 13 (2003): 1697–1699.

This journal article talks about the specific case of Criminal Law for Women and Fetuses. It includes the different court cases where they dealt with crimes involved with women including those charged while they were pregnant. From this journal article we can see how they are prosecuted

Journal of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology (Online). Chicago, Ill: American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology, 1910.

Criminal Law — Economic Espionage — Ninth Circuit Upholds First Trial Conviction Under § 1831 of the Economic Espionage Act of 1996. — United States v. Chung, 659 F.3d 815 (9th Cir. 2011), cert. denied, No. 11-1141, 2012 WL 929750 (U.S. Apr. 16, 2012)

This journal article was written in the Harvard Law Review talking about Criminal Law and the enacting of the Economic Espionage Act of 1996. It talks about how Espionage crimes are processed in Court as it relates to economic

This Journal is about the history of Criminology dating from 1910 to the present day and the methodology of it in court cases JohnTer0 (talk) 15:08, 14 April 2023 (UTC)