Big Brother Is Watching: Strategies for Dealing with Police Surveillance Technology Plenary
Plenary Materials
- 115 Questions for Paul Greene
- Cross-Examination on Gun Shot Residue Sample
- Daubert Hearing Transcript
- Direct Examination on Shot Spotter Technology Sample (Franceschetti)
- Direct Examination on Shot Spotter Technology Sample (Lomakin)
- iDEN Transceiver Operations Manual
- Interest of N.H., 226 N.J. 242 (2016)
- Jones v. United States (2017)
- Motion to Exclude DNA Evidence and Request for Hearing Sample
- Motion in Limine to Exclude Expert Testimony on Latent Prints or in the alternative, to Limit Such Testimony Sample
- Motion to Exclude Gun Shot Residue Evidence Sample
- Motion to Exclude Shot Spotter Evidence Sample
- People v. Thomas Jury Trial Transcript
- Scott Weiser Testimony (Shot Spotter)
- Shot Spotter Gunshot Location System Efficacy Study
New Technology
- Automated License Plate Readers (ALPR) (A Guide for Criminal Defense Attorneys)
- Biometrics: Facial Recognition (A Guide for Criminal Defense Attorneys)
- Body-Worn Cameras (A Guide for Criminal Defense Attorneys)
- Cell Phone Location Tracking or CSLI (A Guide for Criminal Defense Attorneys)
- Cell Site Simulators (A Guide for Criminal Defense Attorneys)
- Drones or UAVs (A Guide for Criminal Defense Attorneys)
- Fighting Compelled Decryption (A Guide for Criminal Defense Attorneys)
- Government Hacking & Malware (A Guide for Criminal Defense Attorneys)
- Predictive Policing (A Guide for Criminal Defense Attorneys)
- Reining in Digital Searches (A Guide for Criminal Defense Attorneys)
- Santa Clara’s Ordinance Relating to Surveillance Technology
fMRI Articles
- A Brave New World of Interrogation Jurisprudence?
- Brain Imaging and Courtroom Deception
- Brain Imaging for Judges: An Introduction to Law and Neuroscience
- Brain Imaging in the Courtroom: The Quest for Legal Relevance
- Brain Scans as Evidence: Truths, Proofs, Lies, and Lessons
- Detection of Deception with fMRI: Are We There Yet?
- Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) and Expert Testimony
- Functional MRI Detection of Deception After Committing a Mock Sabotage Crime
- Head Case
- The Influence of fMRI Lie Detection Evidence on Juror Decision-Making
- The Law’s Use of Brain Evidence
- The Limitations and Potential of Neuroimaging in the Criminal Law
- Neuroimages in Court: Less Biasing Than Feared
- Neuroimaging, Uncertainty, and the Problem of Dispositions
- Neuroscience, Mental Privacy, and the Law
- Neuroscience, Mindreading, and the Courts: The Example of Pain
- Playing Devil’s Advocate: The Case Against fMRI Lie Detection
- Scanning the Horizon: The Past, Present, and Future of Neuroimaging for Lie Detection in Court
Articles Using 3 TESLA Functional MRI and Pattern Recognition
- Being Asked to Tell an Unpleasant Truth About Another Person Activates Anterior Insula and Medial Prefrontal Cortex
- I Want to Lie About Not Knowing You, But My Precuneus Refuses to Cooperate
- Let the Man Choose What To Do: Neural Correlates of Spontaneous Lying and Truth-Telling
- Lying in the Scanner: Localized Inhibition Predicts Lying Skill
- Memory Detection Using fMRI – Does the Encoding Context Matter
- Manipulating Item Proportion and Deception Reveals Crucial Dissociation Between Behavioral, Autonomic, and Neural Indices of Concealed Information
- The Naïve and the Distrustful – State Dependency of Hippocampal Computations in Manipulative Memory Distortion
- The Neural Basis of Deception in Strategic Interactions
- The Neural Basis of Dishonest Decisions that Serve to Harm or Help the Target
- Neural Bases of Falsification in Conditional Proposition Testing: Evidence from an fMRI Study
- Neural Correlates of Deception in Social Contexts in Normally Developing Children
- Neural Correlates of Outcome Processing Post Dishonest Choice: An fMRI and ERP Study
- Neural Correlates of Self-Deception and Impression-Management
- Polygraphy and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Lie Detection: A Controlled Blind Comparison Using the Concealed Information Test
- Possible Role of an Error Detection Mechanism in Brain Processing of Deception: PET-fMRI Study
- Right Inferior Frontal Gyrus Activation as a Neural Marker of Successful Lying
- Unfolding the Spatial and Temporal Neural Processing of Lying about Face Familiarity
Articles Using Older Functional MRI
- A Functional MRI Study of Deception Among Offenders with Antisocial Personality Disorders
- Antisocial Behaviour and Lying: A Neuropsychiatric Presentation of Agenesis of the Corpus Callosum
- Brain Regions Concerned with the Identification of Deceptive Soccer Moves by Higher-Skilled and Lower-Skilled Players
- Decoding the Processing of Lying Using Functional Connectivity MRI
- “I Know You Can Hear Me”: Neural Correlates of Feigned Hearing Loss
- Neural Correlates of Feigned Memory Impairment Are Distinguishable From Answering Randomly and Answering Incorrectly An fMRI and Behavioral Study
- Sex, Lies, and fMRI – Gender Differences in Neural Basis of Deception
- Specific Marker of Feigned Memory Impairment: The Activation of Left Superior Frontal Gyrus
- When Pinocchio’s Nose Does Not Grow: Belief Regarding Lie-Detectability Modulates Production of Deception