CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 1 CRIMES Types & Elements Types of crimes: Felonies - punishable by death or imprisonment for more than one year. Misdemeanors - most other crimes other than felonies. Common Elements: Actus Reus (A.R.) Mens Rea (M.R.) Concurrence Causation ACTUS REUS Includes: voluntary acts or the results achieved. Excludes: mere thoughts, involuntary acts (sleepwalking), and status or condition (addiction). Application: Possession Crimes: require dominion, control, and knowledge of possession of the item. Knowledge of illegality not required. Omissions (failure to act): if duty to act is imposed by statute, court order, close blood relationship, contract, creating victim’s peril, or undertaking rescue. Vicarious liability: eliminates requirement that defendant act personally. Usually applied to employers, principals, and car owners. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 2 MENS REA Defendant’s state of mind which concurs with his actus reus to establish criminal conduct. Degrees of Mens Rea: 1. Specific Intent (purposeful): intent to achieve a particular result. Specific intent crimes include: degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, burglary, inchoate crimes, and theft offenses. 1st 2. General Intent (knowing): mere intention to commit the act. 3. Recklessness: awareness and disregard of a known, substantial and unjustifiable risk. 4. Negligence: actor should have known of the substantial and unjustifiable risk of the activity engaged in. TRANSFERRED INTENT Transferred intent is a legal fiction which holds a defendant liable for intending to cause harm to a particular person or property, but mistakenly harming some other person or property. Also applicable when an intended harm occurs in an unintended way. Only applies to those crimes where a particular result is an element of the crime. Does not apply to criminal attempts. When defendant’s intent is “transferred” from the intended to the actual victim, the proximate cause between the act and the result is established. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 3 STRICT LIABILITY CRIMES reference to mens rea. Strict liability crimes are crimes defined without Culpability rests solely on committing the prohibited act. Statutory creations, usually applied in areas of: public morals health and safety. Mistake of law or fact is irrelevant to strict liability crimes. Examples: statutory rape, child pornography, and food protection statutes and ordinances. Felony murder could be considered a form of strict liability. CONCURRENCE Temporal concurrence between the actus reus and mens rea is usually required. Mens rea must coincide in such a way as to cause or actuate the actus reus. With a series of acts resulting in the prohibited conduct, courts often view it as one continuous transaction for purposes of concurrence. The concurrence requirement operates to insulate a defendant from greater liability when the actual harm caused is far worse than defendant’s intent. The “egg shell” theory of torts is inapplicable to crimes (except in homicide cases). CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 4 CRIMINAL CAUSATION Required for all crimes except inchoate crimes. Factual & Proximate Cause Defendant’s conduct (actus reus) must cause the prohibited result. Both cause-in-fact and legal cause must be shown. Factual Cause (cause-in-fact): there are 2 kinds 1. “But for” D’s conduct, the harmful result would not have occurred. 2. Substantial factor - D’s conduct was a substantial factor in the result, although another’s conduct was sufficient by itself to bring about the result. Proximate Cause (legal cause): determined by policy considerations. Connection between conduct and harmful result cannot be too remote. Year-and-a-day rule applied to homicides (3 years in California). INTERVENING FACTORS Intervening factors can break the chain of causation, depending upon how they are classified. Independent (coincidental), unforeseeable intervention breaks the chain of causation. Dependent, foreseeable interventions will not be found to break the chain of causation. To break causation, they must be unusual, unforeseeable, and the injury suffered must be different from that intended by defendant. Failure of a third party to intervene or resue the victim never breaks the causation chain. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 5 EXCUSES TO CRIMES Defenses to Crimes include excuses and justifications Excuses to crimes include: 1. Mental Incapacity (insanity and diminished capacity) 2. Infancy 3. Intoxication 4. Mistake 5. Duress or Coercion 6. Consent 7. Entrapment INSANITY A legal conclusion bases upon medical evidence which overcomes the presumption of D’s competence and responsibility. Some states place the burden of proof on the defendant. M’Naghten Rule (right/wrong test): D had a mental disease or defect such that he did not understand the “nature and quality” of his act, or did not know that the act was wrong. Used by half the states. Psychopathic personality doesn’t count because it’s not considered a mental disease. Irresistible Impulse: factors which lead to a “substantial impairment” of D’s ability to control himself. Durham Rule: unlawful act was the “product” of mental disease or defect. Rarely used today. ALI/MPC test: if “as a result of mental disease or defect, D lacks substantial capacity either to appreciate criminality of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirement of law”. Not included is “merely repeated anti-social conduct. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 6 INSANITY DISTINGUISHED distinguished from: Insanity as a defense to a crime should be Competency to stand trial: measured by D’s ability to understand the proceedings against him and assist counsel in his defense. Commitment: following acquittal because of a finding of not guilty by reason of insanity. Insanity at time of execution: no state permits execution of insane persons. Diminished Capacity: a defense of mental impairment not rising to the level of insanity. Includes voluntary intoxication. Negates requirement of specific intent, premeditation, and malice aforethought. Reduces culpability to a less severe offense. Abolished in Ca. INFANCY Criminal capacity of children under common law is: Under 7: conclusive presumption against criminal capacity. 7-14: rebuttable presumption against capacity overcome by a showing of malice of awareness of the wrongful conduct. Over 14: treated the same as adults. Modern statutes fix varying ages as cut-offs between the adult criminal court system and the juvenile court system. Note: see Criminal Procedure card #37-CrP for rights of juvenile defendants. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 7 INTOXICATION INTOXICATION Voluntary: Not per se a defense to a criminal charge. Rather, evidence of voluntary intoxication is admissible to show that D did not form specific intent, when specific intent is the requisite mens rea for the charged crime. Involuntary: If impairment is only slight, can be used to negate formation of specific intent. If impairment is great and approximates temporary insanity, involuntary intoxication is a complete defense, regardless of the mens rea required. MISTAKE Of Law and Of Fact the _______________ IMPOSSIBILITY to be. Mistake of Fact: an honest and reasonable mistake of fact may excuse conduct provided conduct would not have been illegal or morally wrongful under the facts as D supposed them Mistake of Law: mistake or ignorance of law, even if reasonable, will not excuse an otherwise criminal act or omission unless it is traceable to information from a high level of the executive, legislative, or judicial branches. Impossibility: (see also card #24 -attempt) Legal impossibility is always a defense. Factual impossibility is no defense in cases where, had the facts been as the defendant believed them to be, there would have been a crime. However, defendant may be guilty of attempt. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 8 DURESS or COERCION Acting under an imminent threat from another to inflict death or serious bodily harm is an excuse. Not available where the coerced act involves serious violence, rape, or criminal homicide. With homicide, duress may negate premeditation and deliberation, mitigating the crime. Never held to excuse intentional homicide, but Model Penal Code urges adoption of duress as an excuse. CONSENT as an element (e.g. rape). An excuse for crimes which require lack of consent Excuses acts which do not entail serious injury to the victim (battery, but not mayhem or homicide). Not effective where obtained by force, threat of immediate injury, or fraud ENTRAPMENT criminal activity. Argues that a law enforcement agent instigated the Not applicable to crimes involving serious physical injury. Federal courts and most states use a subjective “predisposition” test, voiding the defense if predisposition can be shown. Some states use an objective test, focusing on the police conduct to see if an innocent person would have been induced to commit the crime. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 9 JUSTIFICATIONS 1. Public and Domestic Authority 2. Self-defense 3. Defense of Others or of Property 4. Crime Prevention 5. Necessity PUBLIC & DOMESTIC AUTHORITY Public Authority: state authorization to do various acts, such as execution, war, law enforcement. Domestic Authority: parents and school officials may inflict reasonable non-deadly force upon children to achieve discipline. SELF-DEFENSE Non-deadly force is permitted when reasonably necessary to prevent an imminent physical attack. Aggressors forfeit this defense unless and until: 1. victim responds to non-deadly attack with deadly force, or 2. aggressors withdraw from the encounter and communicate the withdrawal to the adversary. Deadly force is permitted only where it reasonably appears necessary to prevent death or serious injury, or to prevent the commission of a violent felony or escape of a violent felon. Deadly force is permitted if suspect inflicted or threatened to inflict serious physical harm (Tenn. v. Garner). The imperfect defense of an honest but unreasonable belief in the need for deadly force usually results in a voluntary manslaughter conviction. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 10 DEFENSE OF OTHERS DEFENSE OF PROPERTY Defense of Others: May use a reasonable amount of non-deadly or deadly force to defend a victim against physical attack, provided that the victim would be so privileged to act. A good faith reasonable mistake of fact is a defense for an intervenor who harms an innocent party. Defense of Property: Reasonable, non-deadly force to prevent imminent trespass to real or personal property is permitted. Deadly force is only permitted when a dwelling is involved. CRIME PREVENTION NECESSITY Crime Prevention An excuse when non-deadly force is used which reasonably appears necessary to prevent a misdemeanor or felony constituting breach of the peace. Deadly force can be used to prevent a violent felony. Necessity Invasion of the real or personal property rights of another is permitted where physical forces of nature make it necessary in order to avoid an even greater evil. Necessity is never an excuse for homicide. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 11 INCHOATE CRIMES Solicitation Attempt Conspiracy SOLICITATION another to commit a crime. Solicitation is enticing, advising, or encouraging AR - instigation, not mere encouragement MR - specific intent to solicit the commission of a crime Vicarious liability applies. Solicitor will be an accomplice if an attempt or the crime itself occurred. Merges with accomplice or conspirator liability if in fact the person solicited commits the crime pursuant to the agreement with the solicitor. Withdrawal is ineffective as to the solicitation offense, but may negate accomplice liability. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 12 ATTEMPT Attempt is a substantial but unsuccessful effort, coupled with specific intent, to commit a crime. Merges into the completed substantive crime. Must find a substantial overt act. Impossibility: 1. factual impossibility is no defense. 2. legal impossibility may be a defense in some jurisdictions to attempt crimes. Note on impossibility: M.P.C. and many states (including Ca.) Make no distinction between legal and factual impossibility. Neither is a defense to attempt where, had the facts been as the defendant believed them to be, there would have been a crime (applies also to conspiracy). Abandonment: a defense only if done far enough from crime completion, not in fear of immediate apprehension. CONSPIRACY An agreement between two or more persons to commit an unlawful act (or of a lawful act in an unlawful manner). AR - an agreement (even if informal and without knowledge of all parties involved). Most states require an overt act (less than required for attempt) in furtherance of the conspiracy in addition to initial act of agreeing. MR - intent to agree, plus the specific intent to achieve the unlawful result. A separate offense that does not merge with completed substantive crime. Separate prosecution & punishment. Wharton’s Rule provides that when a crime necessarily involves two parties (adultery, incest, bigamy, dueling), only substantive offense (not conspiracy) can be charged unless there are more than 2 participants. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 13 CONSPIRACY Vicarious Liability Vicarious liability for criminal acts committed by coconspirators is an important aspect of conspiracy. The ‘46 Pinkerton case holds that all co-conspirators are liable for all substantive crimes committed by any one co-conspirator “in furtherance” of the conspiracy, but the crimes must be “reasonably foreseeable” as a “natural consequence” of the agreement. Under the M.P.C., renunciation of the conspiracy is a possible defense, but only if conspiracy is actually thwarted. Most states do not recognize the abandonment defense, but allow withdrawal to start the statute of limitations running. NON-HOMICIDE CRIMES 1. Assault 2. Battery 3. Mayhem 4. Rape 5. Statutory Rape 6. False Imprisonment 7. Kidnapping CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 14 ASSAULT An attempted battery, or intentionally causing apprehension of immediate battery. AR - a menacing act or gesture (not merely a verbal threat) MR - specific intent to do an act which would amount to battery or specific intent to produce fear of an immediate battery. Can escalate to a felony by “aggravated assault” statutes requiring either the use of weapons or the intent to commit other specified felonies like rape or robbery. Note re CA.: simple assault, assault with a deadly weapon, and assault with a deadly weapon against a police officer are general intent crimes (by case law), therefore, voluntary intoxication is not a defense. BATTERY of another. The intentional bodily injury or offensive touching AR - the slightest touching, even if indirect, of the person or things about the person. MR - general intent. Note: many jurisdictions permit recklessness or negligence to suffice as mens rea. MAYHEM Maiming or disfiguring another, with malice. AR - causing bodily injury which permanently maims or disfigures. MR - malice, including specific intent or wanton conduct. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 15 RAPE STATUTORY RAPE Rape is non-consensual sexual intercourse with a woman other than the defendant’s wife. AR - penetration without consent MR - general intent Husbands can be charged with conspiracy or accomplice liability. Some modern statutes (including CA.) Allow husbands to be charged with rape. Statutory rape: a strict liability crime of having consensual sexual intercourse with an under-age female. A small number of states, like CA., permit an “honest and reasonable belief” that the victim was over-age. Consent is no defense. FALSE IMPRISONMENT another person. Intentional use of force or the threat of force to confine AR - force and confinement MR - specific intent Force includes physical barriers, threats, and even a show of authority (badge or uniform). Confinement includes any significant interference with a person’s freedom of movement. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 16 KIDNAPPING False imprisonment with asportation. AR - force, confinement, and asportation MR - specific intent Asportation need not be extensive. If asportation does not significantly increase the risk of harm to the victim the trend is to limit the crime to false imprisonment (a misdemeanor). Can be accomplished by fraud. HOMICIDE CRIMES Unlawful killing of another person. Classified as: 1. Murder: 1st Degree Murder intent to kill plus premeditation: deliberation; poison; torture; ambush; bomb; lying-inwait; or, felony murder. 2nd Degree Murder by specific intent to kill or general intent to do an act almost certain to produce death; intent to do serious bodily harm; wanton or reckless conduct (“depraved heart” murder). 2. Voluntary Manslaughter: intentional homicide with mitigating factors such as provocation with no time to cool off (sudden quarrel, heat of passion). 3. Involuntary Manslaughter: no intent to kill, but recklessness or gross negligence. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 17 MURDER malice. Murder is an unjustifiable homicide committed with AR - homicide MR - malice, including actual intent to kill; intent to inflict grave bodily harm; wanton behavior; imputed malice via the felony murder rule. First Degree Murder includes: 1. Murders committed with specific intent to kill plus premeditation and deliberation, 2. Felony murders based upon statutorily enumerated felonies, and 3. Murder committed by certain methods (poison, torture, ambush, or bomb). Second Degree Murder is intentional murder without premeditation, wanton murders, felony murders involving or inherently dangerous felonies not listed under 1st degree murder, or intent-to-do-great-bodily-injury. FELONY MURDER The felony murder rule is used when the death of a victim is proximately caused by acts committed by a felon during the perpetration of a dangerous or enumerated felony (arson, robbery, burglary, rape, mayhem). If required mens rea for the underlying felony is shown, “malicious” state of mind is imputed to a person in the process of committing the felony, resulting in a murder charge. Things to watch: 1. crime being committed must be statutorily enumerated (1st degree) or “inherently dangerous” (2nd degree), 2. Proximate cause (no unforeseeable intervening acts or consequences?), 3. “Perpetration” commences with attempt and ends with escape, 4. Death must be caused by the felon or agent of felon (not by victim or police). CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 18 MANSLAUGHER Voluntary & Involuntary under passion, emotional Voluntary Manslaughter: an international criminal homicide committed without malice because done circumstances of provocation (heat of upset, or sudden quarrel). AR - homicide MR - specific intent to kill, seriously injure, or create a very high risk of either. Note: a failed (unreasonable) self defense results in a finding of voluntary manslaughter. Involuntary Manslaughter: unintentional homicide without malice. AR - homicide MR - gross or criminal negligence, including intent to inflict non-serious bodily harm. Some states adopt misdemeanor-manslaughter rules, comparable to felony- murder rules, where underlying misdemeanor is likely to cause death. BURGLARY Burglary, at common law, was the trespassory breaking and entering of the dwelling house of another at night with intent to commit a felony therein. AR - breaking, including raising unlocked windows and entrance by fraud, trick, or threat. Physical entry can be by instrument. Includes structures within the “curtilage” of the main house and business structures, if slept in. MR - intent to make nocturnal intrusion and specific intent to commit any felony or petty larceny once inside. The actual felony need not be accomplished. Modern statutes loosen elements: daytime and other structures included, no actual breaking necessary. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 19 ARSON of another. Arson is the malicious burning of the dwelling house AR - dwelling is the same as for burglary. Burning requires some charring, but substantial damage is not required. MR - malice. Either intent to burn or reckless burning. Does not include accidental or merely negligent acts. PERSONAL PROPERTY CRIMES PERSONAL PROPERTY CRIMES: 1. Larceny 2. Embezzlement 3. False Pretenses 4. Robbery 5. Extortion 6. Receiving Stolen Property 7. Forgery 8. Uttering CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 20 LARCENY LARCENY BY TRICK deprive Larceny is the trespassory taking and carrying away of another’s personal property with the intent to him of it permanently. AR - Taking is against possession. Carrying away may involve only slight movement, but requires some removal. Victim may be mere possessor, not necessarily owner. MR - Actual intent to carry off another’s property plus specific intent to deprive him of it permanently. Specific intent can be formed after the taking. Finders can commit the crime they have a reasonable clue to the loser’s identity or whereabouts. if Larceny by trick is a form of larceny where owner of property is induced to voluntarily part with possession by fraud, trick, or deception. EMBEZZLEMENT rightfully possessed property. Embezzlement is the fraudulent conversion of AR - an act which seriously interferes with the owner’s rights. Acts include: spending, selling, seriously damaging the item, giving it away, or refusing to return it. An embezzler is usually one to whom an item has been entrusted. MR - specific intent to act fraudulently formed only after receiving possession legally. Note: intent to deprive permanently is not required. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 21 FALSE PRETENSES False pretenses is the act of obtaining possession and title by false representations of past or present material facts. AR - obtaining title by means of an untrue statement. The representation must be factually untrue and partially relied upon by the victim. MR - a known false misrepresentation. Note: must show that the victim intended to pass title as well as possession. If only possession is given up, the crime is larceny by trick. ROBBERY Robbery is larceny of personal property from the person or presence of another by use of force or intimidation. AR - larceny plus presence of the victim and use of force or intimidation. MR - same as for larceny, including specific intent. Any force sufficient to constitute a battery or assault suffices so long as it is more than necessarily involved in taking the item itself. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 22 EXTORTION Extortion is the use of a threat other than one of immediate physical injury for the purpose of acquiring another’s property (real or personal) or for the purpose of inducing another to perform a service. AR - making a threat to cause future physical injury, or to cause present or future harm to property or reputation. MR - specific intent to acquire the property of another. RECEIVING STOLEN PROPERTY stolen. Receiving Stolen Property is receiving personal property knowing or having reason to know it to be AR - receiving property which is stolen. MR - knowledge and intent to deprive permanently. Knowledge need be no more than a correct belief that the property was in some manner stolen. Stolen character may be inferred from the circumstances. This is a specific intent crime. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 23 FORGERY or apparent legal significance. Forgery is the making of a false writing having actual AR - writing, typing, or printing a new document, or altering an existing writing. MR - intent to make a false writing and the specific intent to use it to defraud. The writing itself must be false, and it must be one that has actual or apparent legal significance, as opposed to intrinsic, historical, or artistic value. UTTERING be false with intent to defraud. Uttering is offering as genuine an instrument known to Many states absorb this activity into the crime of forgery. Where uttering is a separate offense, it is not essential that the document be honored. CRIMES AGAINST MORALITY Crimes Against Morality include: 1. Adultery - sexual intercourse by a married person with someone other than the spouse. 2. Fornication - sexual intercourse between unmarried persons. 3. Illicit cohabitation - open and notorious living together by an unmarried couple. 4. Bigamy - entering into a “marriage” while one is already legally married. 5. Incest - intercourse or marriage to a close blood relative. 6. Seduction - sexual intercourse by a male with a previously chaste woman induced by a false promise of marriage. 7. Sodomy - seriously deviate or unnatural sexual practices between two persons, or a person and an animal. CRIMINAL LAW Flashcards page 24 CRIMES AGAINST JUSTICE Crimes against Justice or Government 1. Misprison 2. Compounding 3. Perjury 4. Bribery 5. Escape 6. Rescue 7. Breach of the Peace 8. Unlawful Assembly 9. Riot PARTIES TO CRIMES 4 common law classifications of parties to crimes: 1. Principal in the 1st Degree - perpetrator who performs the acts constituting the crime. 2. Principal in the 2nd Degree - an on-the-scene aider present to assist, encourage, or facilitate the action of the perpetrator. 3. Accessory Before the Fact - offers pre-crime encouragement or solicitation. 4. Accessory After the Fact - a post-crime aider who assists perpetrators in avoiding apprehension conviction. Wives and close relatives are usually exempt. or Parties share vicariously for any criminal act reasonably necessary to complete the target crime. Note: at common law principals had to be convicted first before accessories could be found guilty. Modernly, #’s 1-3 are all considered principals.