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Corey, my answer of using FxCop had assumed you were interested in removing unused private members, however to solve the problem with other cases you can try using NDepend. With Here is some CQL to remove themdetect unused public members (adapted from an article listed below):

// <Name>Potentially unused methods</Name>
WARN IF Count > 0 IN SELECT METHODS WHERE
 MethodCa == 0 AND            // Ca=0 -> No Afferent Coupling -> The method 
                              // is not used in the context of this
                              // application.

 IsPublic AND                 // Check for unused public methods

 !IsEntryPoint AND            // Main() method is not used by-design.

 !IsExplicitInterfaceImpl AND // The IL code never explicitely calls 
                              // explicit interface methods implementation.

 !IsClassConstructor AND      // The IL code never explicitely calls class
                              // constructors.

 !IsFinalizer                 // The IL code never explicitely calls
                              // finalizers.

The article also goes over detecting dead fields and types.

Source: Patrick Smacchia's "Code metrics on Coupling, Dead Code, Design flaws and Re-engineering. The article also goes over detecting dead fields and types.

(EDIT: made answer more understandable)

show/hide this revision's text 1

Corey, my answer of using FxCop had assumed you were interested in removing unused private members, however to solve the problem with other cases you can try using NDepend. With some CQL to remove them:

// <Name>Potentially unused methods</Name>
WARN IF Count > 0 IN SELECT METHODS WHERE
 MethodCa == 0 AND            // Ca=0 -> No Afferent Coupling -> The method 
                              // is not used in the context of this
                              // application.

 IsPublic AND                 // Check for unused public methods

 !IsEntryPoint AND            // Main() method is not used by-design.

 !IsExplicitInterfaceImpl AND // The IL code never explicitely calls 
                              // explicit interface methods implementation.

 !IsClassConstructor AND      // The IL code never explicitely calls class
                              // constructors.

 !IsFinalizer                 // The IL code never explicitely calls
                              // finalizers.

The article also goes over detecting dead fields and types.

Source: Patrick Smacchia's "Code metrics on Coupling, Dead Code, Design flaws and Re-engineering.