Crim Law Flashcards
Aiding and Abetting
This is MI accomplice liability
Prosecutor must show:
1) a crime was committed
2) the defendant assisted before, during or after the commission of the crime
3) defendant intended the commission of the crime or knew the other person intended it at the time defendant gave assistant
First Degree Premeditated Murder
1) the defendant caused the death of the decedent
2) defendant intended to kill decedent
3) the intent to kill was premeditated
4) the killing was deliberate and
5) the killing was not justified or excused
Second Degree Murder
1) defendant caused the death of the decedent
2) the killing was done with malice
3) the killing was not justified or excused
Malice is:
1) intent to kill
2) intent to do great bodily harm, or
3) intent to create a high risk of death or great bodily harm with knowledge that death or great bodily harm will be the probable result
Voluntary Manslaughter
1) When the defendant acted, she acted on impulse from passion instead of judgment
2) the killing must itself result from this emotional excitement
Felony Murder
Felony + killing = murder
Michigan requires proof of malice and specific crimes can be the felony (arson, larceny, home invasion, or robbery)
Self-Defense
Evidence must show:
1) defendant honestly and reasonably believed that he was in imminent danger
2) the feared danger was death or serious bodily harm
3) the action taken appeared at the time to be immediately necessary
4) the defendant was not the initial aggressor
5) (for statutory self-defense) accused was not engaged in the commission of a crime
Once evidence of self-defense is introduced, the
prosecutor bears the burden of disproving it beyond a reasonable doubt.
Voluntary Intoxication
Defense to specific crimes only if:
1) defendant legally obtained and properly used medication or another substance, and
2) did not know or reasonably should have known that he would become intoxicated
Robbery
A person who in the course of committing a larceny, uses force or violation against any person who is present, or who assaults or puts the person in fear is guilty of robbery.
-in the course of = includes an attempt to commit the larceny and flight or attempted flight after the larceny
Elements:
1) using force or violence against or putting complainant in fear,
2) while in the course of committing and
3) the complainant was present while the defendant was in the course of committing a larceny
Does not require actual taking or larceny but rather contemplates an attempted larceny
Armed Robbery
A person is guilty of armed robbery in Michigan, if while committing a robbery he or she:
1) possessed a weapon designed to be dangerous and capable of causing death or serious injury,
2) possessed any object capable of causing death of serious injury and the defendant used it as a weapon,
3) possessed any other object used or fashioned in a manner to lead the person who was present to reasonably believe it was a dangerous weapon, or
4) resented orally or otherwise that he was in possession of a weapon
First-Degree Home Invasion
1) Defendant broke and entered into a dwelling OR entered the dwelling without permission; and
2) the defendant intended to commit a felony, larceny, or assault at the time of entering, OR at any time the defendant was present in or leaving the dwelling, he or she committed a felony, larceny, or assault; and
3) when the defendant was entering, present in, or leaving the dwelling, either the defendant was armed with a dangerous weapon OR another person was lawfully present in the dwelling
- -it is second degree home invasion if this third element is not present!
- -it is third degree if the defendant intends to commit a misdemeanor inside
Dwelling: structure or shelter used to permanently or temporarily as place of abode
Arson
Arson is present when a person willfully burns, damages, or destroys by fired or explosive:
- an apartment (1st degree)
- real prop that results in physical injury (1st degree)
- a dwelling (2nd degree)
- a building (3rd degree)
- person prop (3rd/4th degree)
- -degree is determined by prop value and whether person has prior conviction
Possession of Controlled Substance with Intent to Deliver
1) defendant possessed a controlled substance
- -possession is not defined but can be actual or constructive
- –constructive exists when the totality of the circumstances indicates a sufficient nexus between defendant and the contraband (more than mere presence at location look more towards right to exercise control over it)
2) defendant knew she possessed a controlled substance
3) the defendant intended to deliver the controlled substance to someone else
3) the controlled substance defendant intended to deliver was in a mixture that weighed less than 50 grams
intent: possession with intent to deliver
Conspiracy
1) An intentional agreement (express or implied) between two or more persons
- to show agreement look at circumstances, acts and conduct of the parties to establish agreement-in-fact
- can use circumstantial evidence and base on inferences
2) to intentionally commit an illegal act or
3) or to commit a legal act in an illegal manner
Crime of conspiracy is typically completely upon agreement
–Does not require an overt act, just mere acceptance of agreement
Intent is two-fold:
- intent to combine with others and
- intent to accomplish the illegal objective
Assault with Intent to Do Great Bodily Harm
1) An attempt or threat with force or violence to do corporal harm to another (an assault) and
2) an intent to do great bodily harm less than murder
Specific intent crime
- requisite intent to do serious injury of an aggravated nature
- -can be derived from facts and circumstances, established by words or conduct and inferred from defendant’s actual force
Note: does not have to be actual injury!
Transferred Intent
When defendant attempts to injury victim and hits another, two assaults have occurred.
Doctrine of transferred intent proves the requisite intent to fulfill the intent to the person injured.
Necessary state of mine must exist but need not be directed at a particular person (can be directed at someone else)