Crim Law BAR Flashcards
State acquires juries. over a crime if either THE CONDUCT OR THE RESULT happened in that state.
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MERGER - no merger of crimes.
If you commit 2 crimes, you are convicted of both crimes.
EXCEPT… Solicitation and Attempt - do merge into the substantive offenses.
If you complete that crime, you cannot be convicted of attempting to commit that crime.
**Conspiracy does NOT merge into the substantive offense. You CAN be convicted of conspiring to do something and doing it.
Essentials Elements of Crime…
A) An Act
B) An Ommission as an act
C) Mental State
Act = any bodily movement, but act must be VOLUNTARy.
These DO NOT qualify for criminal liability:
- conduct which is not the product of your own volition
- a reflexive or convulsive act (seizure = no crime liability)
- act performed while unconscious or asleep
An Ommission as an Act (failure to do something)
No legal duty to Rescue, but sometimes legal duty to act…
Legal Duty to Act can arise in one of 5 circumstances….
1) By Statute (file your tax returns)
2) By Contract (lifeguard or a nurse has a legal duty to act)
3) Relationship between the parties (parent duty to protect children; spouse to spouse)
4) You voluntarily assume a duty of care and then fail to adequately perform it.
5) Your conduct created the peril.
Four common law mental states of a crime…
1) specific intent
2) Malice
3) General Intent
4) Strict Liabiility
Specific Intent Crimes include….
Students Can Always Fake a Laugh, Even For Ridiculous Bar Facts
1) Solicitation (inchoate offense)
2) Conspiracy (inchoate offense)
3) Attempt (inchoate offense)
4) First Degree Murder
5) Assault
6) Larceny (property)
7) Embezzlement (property)
8) False pretenses
9) Robbery
10) Burglary
11) Forgery
Specific intent crimes will qualify for Additional Defenses not available for other types of crime….
Addn’l Defenses include:
- Voluntary Intoxication
- Unreasonable Mistake of Fact
Malice Crimes…. only 2…
Requires ‘Reckless Indifference’
1) Murder (common law murder, 2nd degree = ‘murder’ on bar)
2) Arson
General Intent = big catch all category
All crimes not mentioned so far are general intent unless they qualify for Strict Liability.
Rape and Battery = Gen. Intent.
Strict Liability - No Intent Crimes
Any defense that negates intent cannot be a defense to the no intent crime of strict liability.
If crime is administrative, regulatory, or morality area and you don’t see any ADVERBS in the statute such as ‘knowingly’ ‘willfully’ or ‘intentionally’ then the Statute is meant to be a NO INTENT crime of STRICT LIABILITY.
Mental State and the Model Penal Code…
PURPOSELY - one acts purposely when it is his Conscious Objective to engage in certain conduct or cause a certain result.
KNOWINGLY - one acts knowingly when he is AWARE that his conduct will very likely case the result.
RECKLESSLY - one acts recklessly when he Concsiously disregards a substantial and unjustifiable risk.
NEGLIGENTLY - one acts negligently when he fails to be aware of a substantial and unjustifiable risk.
Accomplice Liability = one who aids, advises, or encourages the principal in the commission of the crime charged.
Aid - Advise - Encourage
Accomplices must also have the requisite INTENT that the crime be committed.
Accomplices are liable for the Crime itself and all other foreseeable crimes.
Accomplices and Withdrawal..
If the person encouraged the crime, the person must REPUDIATE the encouragement.
If person aided by providing assistance to principal (giving materials), he must do everything possible to NUETRALIZE this assistance (attempting to retrieve the materials).
An alternate means to withdrawing is to contact the police.
Inchoate offenses means an incomplete offense. 3 types:
1) Solicitation
2) Conspiracy
Solicitation: Rule - asking someone to commit a crime. Crime ends when you ask them.
Under common law, it is not necessary that the person solicited agree to commit the crime.
If person asked to commit the crime agrees to it, then it becomes a conspiracy and the solicitation merges and the only crime left when the other person agrees to do it is CONSPIRACY.
Factual Impossibility is no defense.
Conspiracy: Rule - (i) an agreement (ii) with an intent to agree and (iii) an intent to pursue an unlawful objective.
Conspiracy does NOT merge with the substantive offense.
You CAN be convicted of conspiring to do something and doing it (ex: robbery and conspiracy to commit robbery).
Liability for co-conspirators’ crimes - each conspirator is liable for ALL the crimes of coconspirators if those crimes were committed in furtherance of the conspiracy and were foreseeable.
Agreement required for conspiracies need not be expressed, intent can be inferred from conduct.
Bilateral and Unilateral appraoch
Bilateral approach = Traditional, common law, required 2 guilty parties. IF one party is merely faking agreement, othe rperson cannot be guilty of conspiracy.
— Acquittal of all persons with whom a D is alleged to have conspired Precludes Conviction of the remaining D under this approach
Unilateral = Modern MPC approach requires only that one person have a genuine criminal intent.
Overt Act Requirement
Majority rule: in order to ground liability for conspiracy there must be an AGREEMENT PLUS some OVERT ACT in furtherance of conspiracy.
*Any little Act will do to be an overt act in furtherance of conspiracy, even an act of mere preparation (go buy a black ski mask).
Minority rule/common law: grounded liability for conspiracy with the Agreement itself.
Notes on the MBE regarding majority and minority rules - always apply the majority rule
Factual impossibility is NO defense to conspiracy.
Withdrawal, even if it is adequate, can never relieve the D from liability for conspiracy itself.
D can withdraw from liability for other conspirators’ subsequent crimes, but he cannot withdraw from this conspiracy.
Attempt..
Rule: Specific INtent PLUS an OVERT ACT in furtherance of the crime.
For purposes of attempt, the overt act must be a SUBSTANTIAL STEP in furtherance of the commission of the crime; thus, mere preparation cannot ground liability for attempt.
Defenses of Abandonment:
Majority Rule - once D has taken a substantial step toward committing the crime, abandonment is NEVER a DEFENSE.
MPC allows for this defense only if it is fully voluntary and a complete renunciation of criminal purpose.
LEGAL impossibility is a defense to attempt.
FACTUAL impossibility is NOT a defense
Defenses for crimes based on criminal capacity.
- Insanity
- Intoxication
- Infancy
Insanity - 4 Trigger Phrases that are tied to the 4 tests for insanity defense:
1) M’Naghten Rule - at time of his conduct, D lacked ability to know the wrongfulness of his actions or understand the nature and quality of his actions.
2) Irresistible Impulse - D lacked the capacity for self control and free choice.
3) Durham Rule - D’s conduct was a product of mental illness.
4) Model Penal Code - D lacked the ability to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law.
Intoxication
Voluntary and Involuntary
Voluntary Intoxication - Defense on the bar exam only to specific intent crimes (and no other kind of crime).
*Addicts and Alcoholics are always Voluntarily Intoxicated
Involuntary Intoxication - 1) unknowingly being intoxicated or 2) becoming intoxicated under duress.
*something slipped into drink (you didn’t low what or what the effects are)
- you are forced to drink
- Involuntary Intox is a form of Insanity. Thus, it is a defense to ALL CRIMES.
Infancy
2 rules..
1) Under age of 7 = NO criminal liability
2) Under age of 14 = Rebuttable Presumption of no criminal liability.
Principles of Exculpation and Other Defenses
1) Self Defense
2) Defense of a Dwelling
3) Duress
4) Necessity
5) Mistake of Fact