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Huelga! 25 California Lawyer 28 (Nov. 2005).
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Viktor, 25 California Lawyer 30 (Aug. 2005).
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From Case Method to Problem Method: The Evolution of A Teacher, 48 St. Louis U.L.J. 1205 (2004).
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Advising the Pro Se Defendant: The Trial Court's Duties under Faretta, 42 Brandeis Law Journal 329 (2004).
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Cases and Problems in Criminal Procedure: The Police (5th ed., Lexis 2004).
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Cases and Problems in Criminal Procedure: The Courtroom (5th ed., Lexis 2004).
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Cases and Problems in Criminal Law (3rd ed., Anderson, 1995) and (4th ed., Lexis 2004).
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California Attorney's Guide To Damages ch.4 Landlord-Tenant (2nd ed., CEB 2004).
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Get It Right the First Time: Tips From An Appellate Lawyer, 23 California Lawyer 34 (Sept. 2003).
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A Rule in Search of a Reason: An Empirical Reexamination of Chimel and Belton, 2002 Wisconsin Law Review 657 (2002).
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The Problem Method of Teaching Law, Journal of Judicial Reform in Japan (Feb. 2001), and also in 4 Waseda Proceedings of Comparative Law 75 (Tokyo, 2001).
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On Writing a Casebook, 23 Seattle Law Review 1019 (2000).
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Virtual Justice: The Flawed Prosecution of Crime in America, 8 Criminal Law Forum 125 (1997).
- Book Review, 8 Criminal Law Forum 125-142 (1997) (reviewing You Can Tell a Book By Its Cover).
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California Eviction Defense Manual (2nd ed. CEB 1993).
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California Residential Landlord-Tenant Practice (CEB, Annual Supplement, 1992-1996).
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The OJ Inquisition: An American Encounter with Continental Criminal Justice, 28 Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law 1121 (1995).
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Winning an Appeal (3rd ed., Michie 1995).
- Moscovitz, et al., California Landlord-Tenant Practice (2nd ed., CEB 1997-).
- Paul Robinson, Criminal Law Defenses (West, annual supps. 1992-1996).
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Beyond the Case Method: It's Time to Teach With Problems, 42 Journal of Legal Education 241 (1992).
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This land is our land: private landownership has always been subject to public control, 6 California Lawyer 9 (March 1986).
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End of an era, 5 California Lawyer 23 (June 1985).
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Take my case - please, 4 California Lawyer 49 (Dec. 1984).
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Indigent criminal defendants should pay for their appeals: criminal appeals are costly, frequently useless and clog up the courts, 2 California Lawyer 8 (May 1982).
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