Criminal Law Flashcards
Jurisdiction and General Matter
A state acquires jurisdiction over a crime if either the conduct or the result happened in that state.
What about merger?
Generally, there is no merger of crimes in American law.
BUT solicitation and attempt do merge into substantive offense. Thus, if you have completed that crime, you cannot be convicted of attempting to commit the crime.
Conspiracy does NOT merge into the substantive offense. THUS you can be convicted of conspiring to do something and doing it.
Essential Elements of a Crime
- An Act.
- An omission as an Act.
- Mental State
What is an Act?
Bodily movement BUT the act must be a voluntary act.
Bad thoughts is not enough.
Examples of bodily movements that do NOT qualify for criminal liability
OFTEN TESTED
- Conduct which is not the product of your own volition.
- A reflexive or convulsive act..
- An act performed while you are unconscious or asleep. (sleep walking)
What is an omission as an Act?
Generally there is no legal duty to rescue but sometimes there is a duty to act.
When is there a duty to act?
- Required by statute
- Requirement to file tax returns. - Required by contract
- A lifeguard or nurse has a legal duty to act. - Because of the relationship between the parties.
- A parent’s duty to protect children, or a spouse’s duty to protect the other spouse. - Because you voluntarily assume a duty of care and fail to adequately perform it
- Where you conduct created the peril
Four Common Law Mental States of a Crime
- Specific intent crimes,
- Malice crimes
- General intent crimes
AND - Strict liability crimes
Specific Intent Crimes
The importance of specific intent crimes is that they will qualify for additional defenses not available for other types of crime. (voluntary intoxication, unreasonable mistake of fact)
- Solicitation (inchoate offense)
- Conspiracy (inchoate offense)
- Attempt (inchoate offense)
- First degree murder
- Assault
- Larceny
- Embezzlement
- False pretenses
- Robbery
- Burglary
- Forgery
Students Can Always Fake A Laugh, Even For Ridiculous Bar Facts
Malice Crimes
On the bar exam, there are only two malice crimes:
1. Murder
AND
2. Arson
**Need a reckless disregard.
General Intent Crimes
All crimes not so far mentioned are general intent crimes unless they qualify for strict liability.
Rape, Battery
What happens when the test only says “murder”?
It is second degree murder. Common law murder.
NOT A SPECIFIC INTENT
Strict Liability Crimes (No intent)
The importance of strict liability on the bar exam is that any defense that negates intention cannot be a defense to no intent crimes of strict liability.
If the crime is in the administrative, regulatory, or morality (MOST OFTEN) 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.
NO INTENT CRIMES
What about transferred intent fact patterns?
Always two crimes.
Attempted and Actual (Murder)
Mental States 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 cause the result.
- Recklessly: One acts recklessly when he consciously disregards a substantial and unjustifiable risk.
- Negligently: One acts negligently when he fails to be aware of a substantial and unjustifiable risk.
When given a statute, what do you look for?
- Admin , regulatory, or morality purpose?
2. Any adverbs of intent?
Accomplice Liability
An accomplice is one who aids, advises or encourages the principal in the commission of the crime charged.
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 Withdrawl
If the person encouraged the crime, the person must repudiate the encouragement.
If the person aided by providing assistance to the principal, he must do everything possible to neutralize this assistance.
An alternate means of withdrawing is to contact police.
Inchoate Offenses
Means incomplete.
Three Kinds:
- Solicitation
- Conspiracy
- Attempt
Solicitation
Asking someone to commit a crime. The crime ends when you ask them.
It is not necessary for the person to agree to commit the crime.
Factual impossibility is not a defense
What happens if the person you solicit actually does it?
Then it becomes conspiracy and the solicitation merges and the only crime left when the other person
Conspiracy
An agreement, with the intent to agree, and an intent to pursue an unlawful objective.
Notes on Common Law Conspiracy
- Conspiracy does not merge with the substantive offense.
- Robbery and Conspiracy to Commit Robbery
- Liability for Co-conspirators’ crimes: Each conspirator is liable for ALL the the crime of conspirators if those crimes were committed in FURTHERANCE and FORESEEABLE.
- The agreement need not be expressed.
- Intent can be inferred from conduct.
- Factual impossibility is no defense.
- Withdrawal, even if adequate, can never relieve the liability for conspiracy, ONLY subsequent
Approaches to Conspiracy
Bilateral Approach
Unilateral Approach - one person have a genuine criminal intent. (MPC approach)