Attribution of Criminality Flashcards

1
Q

What are Inchoate crimes?

A
  • “Incomplete” crimes
  • Attempt
  • Complicity
  • Conspiracy
  • Solicitation
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2
Q

What are the common law elements of attempt?

A
  • Same mens rea as target crime
  • Intent to cause target crime/harm
  • Intent for necessary circumstances to exist
  • No liability for reckless/negligent
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3
Q

What are the MPC elements of attempt?

A
  • Same mens rea as target crime
  • Purposeful act
  • Purpose or belief to cause harm
  • Same culpability toward existing circumstances
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4
Q

What is the actus reus required for attempt?

A
  • Varies in different jurisdictions
  • Substantial step test (least favorable to defendants, MPC)
  • Proximity test
  • Equivocality test
  • Last act test (most favorable)
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5
Q

What are the limitations of attempt?

A
  • Merger (cannot charge both attempt and commission)
  • Abandonment (Not typical in common law)
  • Renunciation (MPC defense to attempt if: target crime is not mere conduct, voluntary, complete and final)
  • Impossibility (legal, factual, inherent)
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6
Q

What are the common law elements of solicitation?

A
  • Specific intent
  • Somehow encourages to commit target crime
  • Failure is attempted solicitation
  • Felonies or serious misdemeanors
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7
Q

What are the MPC elements of solicitation?

A
  • Purpose of promoting or facilitating
  • Somehow encourages to commit, attempt, or act as accomplice
  • Failure is still soliciatation
  • Any crime
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8
Q

What is not solicitation?

A
  • Conspiracy
  • Attempt
  • Completed crime
  • “True” legal impossibility
  • Renounce (MPC, complete and voluntary, and convince person not to commit crime)
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9
Q

What is the common law Conspiracy?

A
  • Most jurisdictions consider conspiracy an independent offense that doesn’t merge
  • Specific intent (intent to agree, intent to accomplish crime)
  • Bilateral approach
  • Perform an “overt” act (majority)
  • Agreement + intent = liability
  • Ends when criminal purpose ends or abandoned
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10
Q

What is MPC Conspiracy?

A
  • Purpose of promoting/facilitating
  • Intent as to conduct
  • Intent as to result
  • Agreement with one or more
  • Overt act only if crime is minor
  • Looks at each defendant individually
  • Ends when criminal purpose ends or abandoned
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11
Q

What are the general elements of complicity (aiding and abetting)?

A
  • Even Slightly Assists or Encourages (but who does actually assist or encourage)
  • Another in the Commission of a Crime
  • With the Intent to Assist or Encourage and
  • With the Intent that the Crime Assisted or Encouraged be Committed
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12
Q

How does the MPC differ for complicity (aiding and abetting)?

A
  • MPC requires more for mental state and less for conduct
  • MPC creates liability for even attempting to aid, but also requires “purpose of promoting or facilitating the commission of the crime”
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13
Q

What is Pinkerton Liability?

A

-When a conspirator can be held liable for the crimes of his co-conspirators

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