Intentional Homicide Offenses Flashcards
Murder - 1st Degree Murder: Rule
Rule: Cause the death of another with an intent to kill that occurred in a premeditated and deliberate way
Murder - 1st Degree Murder: Premeditated and Deliberate
To determine if D acted in a premeditated and deliberate way consider:
(1) if D had time to think about the act and
(2) the emotional state of D; it should be in a calm and cool manner.
US v. Watson: D pinned officer, stood over officer and shot him -> had enough time to think about if he should kill. D only fired once and was calm after the killing.
Murder - 2nd Degree Murder: Rule
Rule: Cause the death of another with an intent to kill
Voluntary Manslaughter: Rule
Causing the death of another with an intent to kill and with (1) reasonable provocation and (2) in the heat of passion
Voluntary Manslaughter: Heat of Passion
Heat of Passion:
- Subjective: Was this D in the heat of passion? (actually provoked)
- Objective: If certain time has passed, would a reasonably prudent person have cooled off? (reasonable person standard)
Ex parte Fraley: Victim accused of killing D’s son, D finds him months later and shoots him multiple times. The jury found that there was sufficient cooling off time.
Voluntary Manslaughter: Reasonable Provocation
- Subjective: Was D provoked?
- Objective: Would a reasonably prudent person have been provoked?
Some courts use categories for reasonable provocation:
- Physical assault or threat of (People v. Walker, Victim was attacking/provoking D and friends -> D throws a brick and cuts victim with knife)
- Violent or sexual assault on close relative
- Mutual combat
- Adultery (Rowland v. State, D killed wife and lover when he found them in bed together. In the “line of sight”)
- Traditional Rule: words are not sufficient to be grounds for reasonable provocation
Other courts (CA) do not use categories, trust the juries to decide what reasonable provocation is on a case by case basis:
- People v. Berry: CA case that includes long periods of teasing and taunting by a spouse about adultery as reasonable provocation
- Hard factors (like disability, age, gender) can be taken into account when determining what is reasonable provocation.
MPC - Murder
Intent with purpose and knowledge