1L Outline Criminal Law
1L Outline Criminal Law
1L Outline Criminal Law
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Actus Reus Crime contains two components: actus reus and mens rea
Actus reus- no universal definition, some say its conduct (e.g.
picking up a gun and firing), some say its the result (e.g. one
dying)
An act is essential to criminal law.
How far in advance of an act can a statute criminalize conduct. Do
we have to wait until an act occurs? Not necessarily, legislatures
pass statutes that criminalize attempted crimes. So if a man picks
up a rock to break a window, a police officer can grab his arm,
arrest him, and a court can convict him of attempted burglary.
Cannot punish a mans thoughts.
There is an actus reus for conspiracy. (e.g. voicing the criminal
thought)
Possession is an act in so far as it satisfies actus reus.
Look at the Actus Reus issue separate from other issues.
Voluntary Act- Model Penal Code (MPC) 2.01
o Martin v. State
Man arrested, intoxicated, in his house. While taking
him to the jail, the police officer drove on the highway.
The man was yelling obscenities, and then convicted the
man for being drunk in a public place.
One of the requirements for the crime is a voluntary
appearance. Here, the man did not voluntarily go into
the public place, but he was taken there involuntarily.
Thus, there was no actus reus.
Part of Due Process is that a D must satisfy every
element of the statute and the prosecution has the
burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that D
committed the crime and met all the requirements.
o State v. Utter Father, in a drunken stupor, stabbed his son. Does not
remember the incident.
Argues that the so called actus reus was not voluntary,
ergo he is not culpable.
Chapter 5
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Mens rea elements are mental states are related to the actus reus
elements, ergo, what mental state is required to do the actus reus elements.
By having mens rea elements, we are asking the finder of fact to
put himself in the place of the doer, and determine the doers
mentally state at the time of the act and determine beyond
reasonable doubt whether the elements were there.
Worksheet
Burglary
o Breaking and entering of a dwelling house of another at night
Chapter 5
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1. Mistake of Fact
o People v. Navarro
Grand Theft
Specific Intent in this case is intent to
permanently deprive the owner.
Trial court instructed the jury that s
ignorance/mistake must have been reasonable.
This was incorrect.
MPC 2.04 (1)- ignorance or mistake as to a
matter of fact or law is a defense if:
A) the ignorance or mistake negatives the
purpose, knowledge, belief, recklessness or
negligence required to establish a material
element of the offense; or
B) the law provides that the state of mind
established by such ignorance or mistake
constitutes a defense
2. Mistake (or Ignorance) or Law
o IGNORANCE OF THE LAW IS IRRELEVANT TO CULPABILITY
o You can have a mens rea element in regards to illegality, not
traditionally done, but possible.
o People v. Marrero
was visiting NY from CT, where he is a prison guard.
NY statute made it illegal to carry a handgun w/o a
license, but had an exemption for peace officers.
argued that he was exempted, and that he relied on
his misreading of the statute.
Criminal Law
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Chapter 7
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Definition of Homicide:
Killing of a human being by a human being
Criminal and non-criminal (justifiable & excusable)
Criminal Homicide
(1) Murder: unlawful killing of another human being with malice
aforethought with death taking place within a year and a day
(latter phrase was at common law)
Malice aforethought:
o Now includes a variety of mental states
o What will constitute malice aforethought?
1) Intention to kill even if not premeditated
2) Intention to inflict serious bodily harm
A shoots at B with sole intent to cause serious
o Midgett v. State
regularly beat his son. On one such occasion, the
injuries sustained injuries that led to the sons death.
Rule: Duty of the court is to give those accused of first
degree murder the benefit of the requirement that they
be shown by substantial evidence to have premeditated
and deliberated the killing.
must have had the intent of killing his son vs.
beating/injuring him.
The evidence in this case supports only the conclusion
that the appellant intended not to kill his son but to
further abuse him or that his intent, if it was to kill the
child, was developed in a drunken, heated, rage while
disciplining the child. Neither of those supports a finding
of premeditation or deliberation.
Court lowers the conviction from first degree to second
degree based on the theory of intent to cause serious
physical injury.
o State v. Forrest
Son euthanized his father in the hospital. Father was
terminally ill.
Rule: First degree murder is the intentional and
unlawful killing of a human being with malice and with
premeditation and deliberation.
Circumstances to be considered:
Want of provocation
Conduct and statements of before and after
killing
Threats and declarations of before and during
incident
Ill-will or previous difficulty between parties
Dealing of lethal blows after deceased has been
rendered helpless
Evidence that the killing was done in a brutal
manner
State v. Hernandez
o Involuntary Manslaughter
Mens Rea- Negligence
o Prosecution introduced stickers with drinking slogans on
them. Arguing that the stickers showed was aware of the
risk he was creating. In a sense, that he knew drinking such
large amounts of alcohol would distort his reality and driving
skills.
o Rule: Criminal Negligence- A person acts with criminal
negligence or is criminally negligent when he fails to be aware
of a substantial and unjustifiable risk that circumstances exist
or a result will follow, and such failure constitutes a gross
deviation from the standard of care which a reasonable
person would exercise in the situation.
o State v. Williams
Parents were convicted of manslaughter b/c they
negligently failed to supply their 17-month child with
necessary medical attention, and as a result, the infant
died.
D. Unintentional Killings: Unlawful Conduct
1.
The Felony-Murder Rule
a.
The Doctrine in its Unlimited Form
ALI, MPC and commentaries
People v. Fuller
b.
c.
Notes:
o 3.
A) robbery= sufficiently
independent
B) burglary (in which the felony
that the intruder intends to
commit inside is assault with a
deadly weapon)= insufficiently
independent
C) burglary (in which the felony
that the intruder intends to
commit inside is theft)=
sufficiently independent
D) child abuse= depends on the
kind of abuse
E) discharging a weapon at a
inhabited dwelling=
insufficiently independent
FEW CRIMES MERGE!!!!
Usually assault crimes
iv. Killings in the Perpetration or in Furtherance of a
Felony
Chapter 9
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C. Principles of Justification
5. Necessity (Choice of Evils)
a. General Principles
o Nelson v. State
Necessity:
Act charged must have been done to prevent a
significant evil
There must have been no adequate alternative
The harm caused must not have been
disproportionate to the harm avoided
b. Civil Disobedience
c. Defense to Murder?
o The Queen v. Dudley & Stephens
o involuntary
Specific Intent- intent to bring a/b a certain result
o Also, one has knowledge of the illegality
Some wont let evidence in for vol. intox. defense
MPC approach:
o Allows evidence of VI to negate an element of the offense.
o One exception in subsection 2. Where recklessness
established an element of the offense, if the actor, due to selfinduced intoxication, is unaware of a risk of which he would
have been aware had he been sober, such unawareness is
immaterial.
Thus, if youre dealing w/ recklessness, but the reason
for s lack of awareness of the risk is due to his
voluntary intoxication, cannot use VI as defense
Commonwealth v. Graves
o
4. Insanity
c. Struggling for a Definition: The Tests of Insanity
State v. Johnson
o Insanity defense, in any jurisdiction, will provide an excuse.
The idea is to not punish b/c is not culpable enough.
o 4 Tests of Insanity: everyone requires a diagnosable mental
disease/defect, this creates the battle of the experts
MNaghten Rule (2 prongs: cognitive and moral)
Cognitive- does not know the nature and quality
of the act he was doing (cognitive incapacity)
Moral- does not know right from wrong (moral
incapacity)
If meets either of the prongs, he can invoke the
insanity excuse
Irresistible Impulse or Control Test:
Though a person knows the act is wrong, he is
yet, by an insane impulse, irresistibly driven to
commit it, the law must give to this condition its
exculpatory effect.
Chapter 10
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A. Overview
B. Attempt
1.
General Principles
o Attempt crimes were created to allow the police to intervene
before a crime is actually committed
o One cannot be convicted of an attempted crime and the
complete crime. (Doctrine of Merger)
o A sees B from a distance. A pulls out a rifle, but the rifle
misfires.
Is A guilty of homicide? NO
Is A guilt of attempted homicide? Maybe/Probably
o The reason for punishing one for attempting a crime w/o
2.
3.
4.
o State v. Reeves
5.
Special Defenses
o A. Impossibility
Factual Impossibility- occurs when s intended end
constitutes a crime but he fails to consummate it b/c of
a factual circumstance unknown to him or beyond his
control
There is a split among authority regarding factual
impossibility. Some will follow the MPC 5.01 (1)
(a) and some will say that it is
Legal Impossibility:
Pure Legal Impossibility- applies when an actor
engages in conduct that he believes is criminal,
but is not actually prohibited by law
Hybrid Legal Impossibility- exists if s goal was
illegal, but commission of the offense was
impossible due to a factual mistake by him
regarding the legal status of some factor relevant
to his conduct
o People v. Thousand
was charged with attempted distribution of obscene
material to a minor
sent a picture of a male genitalia to an under cover
cop pretending to be a minor
Issue: Whether the defense of impossibility is
permissible for a charge of attempt?
Holding: NO
Reasoning: attempt statute only requires a showing of:
1) intent to commit the prohibited offense; AND 2) an
act toward the commission of that offense. The notion
that it would be impossible for to have committee
the completed offense is simply irrelevant to the
analysis.
o B. Abandonment
C. Assault
D. Solicitation
In some jurisdictions, solicitation is enough to constitute an
attempt.
Note 6 (p. 808)
o Know approaches 1 & 4
1) Treats every solicitation as a specific type of attempt
to be governed by ordinary attempt principles, the
solicitation being an over act that alone or together with
other overt acts may surpass preparation and result in
liability
4) No matter what acts the solicitor commits, he cannot
be guilty of an attempt b/c it is not his purpose to
commit the offense personally
State v. Cotton
o was in jail and wrote a letter to his wife to persuade his
stepdaughter to not testify against him. gave cellmate the
letter to mail. Cellmate gave letter to the police. eventually
wrote another letter, again asking wife to persuade
stepdaughter, which was never sent.
o Issue: Can be convicted of solicitation?
o Holding: NO
o Rule: A person is guilty of criminal solicitation if, w/ the intent
that another person engage in conduct constituting a felony,
he solicits, commands, requests, induces, employs or
o A&A
Did he encourage?
Pinkerton- for bank robbery
Is he a co-conspirator?
Was the bank robbery foreseeable?
A&A- for car robbery
Did he have the mens rea?
o Knowledge?
o Purpose?
Did he encourage?
Pinkerton- for car robbery
Is he a co-conspirator?
Was the car robbery foreseeable?
Was it done in furtherance of the
conspiracy?
2. Mens Rea
o People v. Swain
2 s were involved in a crime. helped kicked a door
in, and then abandoned
Issue: Whether s withdrawal was effective?
Holding: NO
Rule: the crime of conspiracy is defined as two or more
persons conspiring to commit any crime, together with
proof of the commission of an overt act by one or more
of the parties to such agreement
o Note 2 (p. 821)
CA Ct.- If there is a sufficient agreement, we will
consider that to be premeditation
o The agreement must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt
o People v. Lauria
ran a message service. He knew that prostitutes used
it for business.
Issue: Was there an intent to further?
Holding: NO
formed.
o Commonwealth v. Cook
and principal invited victim to join them, in a public
place, and have some beer. The two men introduced
themselves to the victim. All three were walking to the
store when the victim tripped. At that moment, the
principal jumped on the victim and raped her. did not
try to stop, but did make encouraging remarks.
Obviously an accomplice, but is a co-conspirator?
Holding: NO
The evidence does not lead to an inference of an
agreement. The facts show more of a chance encounter,
and a spontaneous decision by the principal to rape the
victim.
4. Conspiracy: Bilateral or Unilateral?
o Traditionally, conspiracy was bilateral. It needed at least two
culpable conspirators. Did not have to know all the players,
but there was no unilateral conspiracy.
o People v. Foster
approached another about robbing an old man. The
potential co-conspirator had no intent to participate in
the robbery.
Issue: Whether the Illinois legislature intended to adopt
the unilateral theory of conspiracy?
Holding: NO
Can the one known be convicted? Yes, but the prosecution will
need to show there was an agreement beyond a reasonable
doubt
5. Scope of an Agreement: Party and Object Dimensions
o In jurisdictions that require an overt act as part of conspiracy,
an overt act of one co-conspirator will apply to ALL coconspirators
o Kilgore v. State (Chain and Wheel Conspiracies)
Hearsay evidence was allowed in lower court
Should not have been b/c the hearsay exception for
conspiracy is only admissible if comment comes from a
co-conspirator. In this case, Benton was not a coconspirator w/ , ergo, the hearsay evidence is
inadmissible.
Rule: The testimony could only be admissible under the
exception to the hearsay rule which provides that the
out-of-court statements of one conspirator are
admissible against all conspirators
Did know a/b the previous conspiracy?
NO, ergo there is no conspiracy
must reasonably know of the other conspiracy
to be considered a co-conspirator
o Braverman v. United States
Chapter 11
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A. Accomplice Liability
1. General Principles
a. Common Law Terminology and Its Significance
o State v. Ward
Historical background on the distinction between
principal and accessory
o Suppose A tells B that he is going to rob the store. B says,
OK. Ill stay in the car. A robs the store
A is the principal (in the 1st degree)
B is an accessory (principal in the 2nd degree)
If C donated his car for the robbery the day before,
o 3.
A. NO
B. NO
C. YES
D. YES
E. YES
F. YES, MPC 2.06 (3) (a) (iii) omission
3. Mens Rea
a. Intent: Purpose or Knowledge?
o When talking a/b accessorial liability, you are saying the
accessory is just as guilty as the principal
Does he have to know or does he have to have the
purpose?
Real issue is what do you need as a prerequisite to say
that an accessory is guilty of the same crime as the
principal?
o Person sitting in car has to have intention to aid
o People v. Lauria
ran a message service that 3 prostitutes used.
knew that they were prostitutes and still allowed them
to use his service (in jurisdiction that follows the
knowledge requirement, would be an accessory).
This jurisdiction follows the purpose requirement.
TN is a purpose jurisdiction
4. Actus Reus
The actus reus component of accomplice liability is clear cut, e.g.,
the secondary party solicited the offense, furnished an
instrumentality used in the commission of the crime, or provided
other significant active aid in the perpetration of the offense
State v. Vaillancourt
o stood by as perpetrator attempted to break into house
EXAM
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Entrapment
The notion of entrapment as a defense is a separate matter, there is
a policy against govt. manufacturing crime. Where an agent of the
govt. essentially creates a crime by instilling the desire to commit a
crime where it did not previous exist.
Issue is predisposition.
Justification- I chose to do this and it was the right thing to do
Self-Defense
Necessity
Excuse- concern is whether was actually choosing
Insanity
Duress
MPC v. Common Law in regards of duress
MPC has person of reasonable firmness language
MPC does not rule out duress for the taking of a life, it is precluded
at common law
Ordinarily one is responsible for putting themselves in the position
of being under duress. Under MPC, you cant use duress if you
recklessly (aware of risk) put yourself in that position, and if you
negligently put yourself there, you are culpable for negligent
crimes. Under Common Law just asks whether was responsible
for being in that position.
Defensive Force
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Defensive Force
All said will have a parallel for defending another person
It is frequently state that the person who is not an initial aggressor
(provoking party) and uses reasonable force to subdue an
adversary when he reasonably believes he is in immediate danger
or bodily harm from the adversary and believes the use of such
force is necessary.
Traditionally, a line is drawn between defenders using deadly force
and non-deadly force. It is stated that it is never reasonable to use
deadly force to repel an adversary.
There must be a reasonable apprehension of the danger, and the
Causation
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Hypos
o Botched rescue.
wounds victim and somebody comes and tries to
help, but botches it and victim dies
Is relieved of culpability?
If the intervening act is in response to s
actions, a ct. is less likely to relieve of
culpability.
o A shoots at B intending to kill B. B perceives being shot, but it
misses. B runs 5 blocks and is struck by lightning and dies.
Is A relieved of culpability?
Most likely a ct. will consider the lightning so far
removed that A will be relieved of culpability for
INTENTIONAL murder, but A will be guilty of
attempted murder.
o