RESUME
DANIEL CHARLES RICHMAN
Fordham University School of Law
140 West 62nd Street
New York, N.Y. 10023
Office: (212) 636-6845
e-mail: drichman@law.fordham.edu
EMPLOYMENT
9/92 - present Professor (tenured in 1998; promoted to full professor in 2000),
Fordham University School of Law
Courses: Criminal Procedure, Evidence,
Evidence Seminar,
Federal Criminal Law
9/02 - 12/02 Visiting Professor, Columbia University School of Law
Courses: Criminal
Procedure,
Federal Criminal
Law and Enforcement
8/96 - 6/97 Visiting Associate Professor of Law
University of Virginia,
School of Law
Courses: Criminal
Procedure, Evidence,
Evidence Seminar,
Federal Criminal Law
1/1987 - 6/92
Assistant United States Attorney, Southern District of New York:
Chief Appellate Attorney (9/91-6/92)
Deputy Chief Appellate Attorney (6/90-9/91)
Organized Crime Unit (8/89-6/90)
Narcotics Unit (9/87-8/89)
General Crimes Unit (1/87-9/87)
10/1986 - 1/1987 Associate, Patterson, Belknap, Webb & Tyler
New York, New York
1985-1986
Law Clerk, Justice Thurgood Marshall
Supreme Court of the United States
Washington, D.C.
1984-1985
Law Clerk, Chief Judge Wilfred Feinberg
Second Circuit Court of Appeals
New York, New York
EDUCATION
Yale Law School, J.D. 1984
Note Editor, Yale Law Journal
Note, Antitrust Standing, Antitrust Injury, and the Per Se Standard, 93 Yale L. J. 1309 (1984).
Oxford University, St. Edmund Hall, England, 1980-1981
Seventeenth Century English History graduate studies,
funded in part by British Government research grant.
Harvard College, A.B. 1980, summa cum laude in History
Phi Beta Kappa
OTHER ACTIVITIES
Peer Reviewer, National Institute of Justice, U.S. Department of Justice, 2000-
Faculty, Columbia Law School Program at University of Leiden, The Netherlands, 2002
Consultant, Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General, 1997-2000.
Special Assistant United States Attorney, Southern District of New York, 1992-94.
Consultant, Treasury Department, Waco Administrative Review, 1993-1994.
Instructor, Trial Advocacy Program, New York City Law Department, 1993-96, 1998, 2000.
Instructor, U.S. State Department Criminal Justice Executive Forum (co-sponsored by the
Bureau of Counter-Terrorism Assistance and the FBI), 1997
Dissertation Advisor, Master of Laws in the Judicial Process program, Univ. of Virginia
School of Law, 1997-98
PUBLICATIONS
“Rybicki”: The Intangible Rights Theory of Criminal Fraud, N.Y.L.J., Jan 12, 2004, p. 4 (with Alan Vinegrad)
Professional Identity: Comments on Simon, 40 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 1609 (2003) (symposium on Problem Solving Courts).
Prosecutors and Their Agents, Agents and Their Prosecutors, 103 Colum. L. Rev. 749 (2003).
Review of Sitcom “A.U.S.A.,” N.Y.L.J., Jan 30, 2003 (with Otto G. Obermaier).
Comments, Federal Criminal Justice System: A Roundtable on Expanding Research
Opportunities, Law and Courts Newsletter (Am. Pol. Sci. Assn.), Winter, 2003.
“Project Exile” and the Allocation of Federal Law Enforcement Authority,
in Guns, Crime, and Punishment (B. Harcourt, ed.), NYU Press, 2003.
“Project Exile” and the Allocation of Federal Law Enforcement Authority,
43 Ariz. L. Rev. 369 (2001) (symposium issue, “Guns, Crime, and Punishment
in America)
The Changing Boundaries Between Federal and Local Enforcement, in Boundary
Changes in Criminal Justice Organizations, vol. 2 of Criminal Justice 2000
(National Institute of Justice, NCJ 182409, July 2000).
Of Prosecutors and Special Prosecutors: An Organizational Perspective, 5
Widener Law Symposium Journal 79 (2000) (with H. Geoffrey Moulton).
Federal Criminal Law Enforcement, Cross-Examination, and Obstruction of Justice,
in Encyclopedia of Crime and Justice (rev. ed. 2001)
Plugging Prosecutorial Leaks, Legal Times, Sept. 20, 1999, at S32-33.
Grand Jury Secrecy: Leaks from an Empty Bucket, 36 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 339 (1999).
Foreword to Symposium on the Changing Role of the Federal Prosecutor, 26 Ford. Urb. L.J. vii (1999).
Criminal Law, Congressional Delegation, and Enforcement Discretion, 46 UCLA L. Rev. 757 (1999).
The Challenges of Investigating Section 5K1.1 in Practice, 11 Federal Sentencing Reporter, No. 2, at 75 (Sept./Oct. 1998)
The Process of Terry-Lawmaking, 72 St. John’s Univ. L. Rev. 1043 (1998).
Fraud Loss Under the Sentencing Guidelines, chapter in Otto G. Obermaier
& Robert G. Morvillo, eds., White Collar Crime: Business and Regulatory
Offenses (1998)
Old Chief v. United States: Stipulating Away Prosecutorial Accountability,
83 Va. L. Rev. 939 (1997)
Bargaining About Future Jeopardy, 49 Vanderbilt L. Rev. 1181 (1996)
Cooperating Clients (adaptation), 3 Crim. Prac. L. Rep. 57 (1995).
Cooperating Defendants: The Costs and Benefits of Purchasing Information from Scoundrels, 8 Fed. Sentencing Rep. 292 (1996)
Cooperating Clients, 56 Ohio St. L.J. 69 (1995).
Book Review of Andrew Ashworth, The Criminal Process: An Evaluative Study, 6 Crim. L. Forum 353 (1995).
Book Review of George P. Fletcher, With Justice for Some: Victims' Rights
in Criminal Trials, N.Y.L.J. Feb. 13,
1995.
Book Review of Gerald Gunther, Learned Hand: The Man and the Judge, N.Y.L.J.,
Aug. 30,
1994.
Of Laws and Men: An Essay on Justice Marshall's View of Criminal Procedure, 26 Ariz. St. L.J. 369 (1994) (with Bruce Green).
PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
Association of the Bar of the City of New York:
Committees: Criminal Advocacy (1992-95)
Committee to Honor Thurgood Marshall
Criminal Justice Council (1995-1996, 1997-99)
Thurgood Marshall Fellowship (2000- ) (chair)
Federal Bar Council
Admitted to New York Bar, 1986.
Also admitted to practice in S.D.N.Y.; E.D.N.Y.; 2d Cir., and U.S. Sup. Ct.
OTHER ACTIVITIES
Testimony before the Senate Subcommittee on Criminal Justice Oversight of
the Judiciary Committee, May 13, 1999: Miranda and 18 U.S.C. § 3501.
Brief of Griffin B. Bell, and other former or present law enforcement officials,
as Amici Curiae in Support of Petitioner in Dickerson v. United States (Miranda
case), U.S. Sup. Ct. 2000 (co-author).