1. Common Law Felonies (Ms. R. M. Lamb)
  2. Murder-unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought, expressed or implied
  3. Unlawful-neither justifiable nor excusable (§ VI,f)
  4. Killing-conduct and result (“kill word”)
  5. Express malice
  6. Intent to kill person killed
  7. Intent to kill another person (transferred intent)
  8. Implied Malice
  9. Intent to inflict serious bodily harm
  10. Indifference to result
  11. Felony murder-death in the course of committing another felony
  12. Grading
  13. 1st degree-“premeditation and deliberation”
  14. 2nd degree-without “p & d”
  15. Sodomy-crime against nature, that is carnal knowledgeby any man or woman with any brute animal or per anum by a man with any other man or with a woman
  16. Consensual sodomy now constitutionally protected by Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558 (2003).
  17. Rape-unlawful carnal knowledge of a woman by force and without her consent
  18. Marital rape not in category, qualifies as aggravated assault
  19. Carnal knowledge requires penetration, emission is split issue
  20. Force & consent:
  21. Resistance to the utmost (no longer applicable)
  22. No consent if insane, idiotic, or insensible
  23. Intimidation can compel
  24. Fraud in factum only, not inducement
  25. Evidence
  26. Corroboration (no longer applicable)
  27. Recent complaint (no longer applicable)
  28. Cross-examination limited by 6th Amendment, Rape Shield laws
  29. Manslaughter-unlawful killing of a human being without malice aforethought
  30. Voluntary-intent to kill in passion or heat of blood, but:
  31. Mere words are insufficient provocation
  32. Mere trespass is insufficient provocation
  33. Heat of blood cannot have cooled or had time to cool
  34. Involuntary
  35. Intent to inflict mere bodily harm
  36. Misdemeanor-manslaughter
  37. Larceny
  38. Simple-taking and carrying away of the personal goods of another of any value from any place, with an intent to steal
  39. Compound (Robbery)-taking and carrying way the personal goods of another of any value from his person or in his presence, by violence of by putting him in fear
  40. Arson-willful and malicious burning of the dwelling house of another, either by night or by day
  41. Neither negligent nor privileged
  42. Mayhem-maliciously depriving another of the use of such of his members as may render him the less able in fighting, either to defend himself or be in the King’s army
  43. Burglary-breaking and entering of dwelling house of another by night, with intent to commit a felony.
  44. Modern statutes exclude the nighttime requirement
  45. United States v. Hudson, 11 U.S. (7 Cranch) 32 (1812) abolished application of common law crimes, mandated the existence of a statute for prosecution.
  46. Other Crimes
  47. Specific Intent Crimes (ELFBARF) (MPC lumps these in with theft, generally)
  48. Embezzlement
  49. Larceny
  50. False pretenses
  51. Burglary
  52. Arson
  53. Robbery
  54. Forgery
  55. Inchoate Crimes
  56. Attempt
  57. Solicitation
  58. Conspiracy
  59. Semantics and Statutory Interpretation
  60. Semantics
  61. Meaning
  62. Intentional-Specific SOM (applies only to what I intend), logical universal (applies to all instances of the word)
  63. Literal-word + grammar=plain meaning (SAY)
  64. Locutionary (pass the salt)
  65. Conventional-plain meaning + context=utterance meaning (MEAN)
  66. Illocutionary (Can you pass the salt?)
  67. Personal-read in, unacceptable in principle
  68. Perlocutionary (DO)-consequences of interpretation
  69. Ambiguity
  70. Verbal-multiplicity of definitions
  71. Syntactical-ambiguously oriented modifier
  72. Contextual-internal sources of ambiguity, interaction with another proximal statement
  73. Vagueness-uncertainty of degree
  74. Generality-multiplicity of reference
  75. Statutory Interpretation
  76. Initial Questions
  77. Who is involved?
  78. What happened, factually and procedurally?
  79. What do people want, practically and legally?
  80. What line of reasoning gets each party what they want?
  81. Methodology
  82. Text itself-hardcore meaning and logical extensions
  83. Context
  84. Case history
  85. Problems or issues with text
  86. Values (autonomy, liberty, truth, fair trial, LE, privacy, etc.)
  87. Identification, relative rank, and impact of choice
  88. Types of Thinking: Reasoning About Rules
  89. Authority (precedent)
  90. Institutional (who should decide-court mandate or defer to legislature)
  91. Rightness-deontological
  92. Consequential-teleological
  93. Elemental Analysis-rooted in statutory language
  94. Who-class of persons (person, whoever, etc?)
  95. Conduct-verb, may be a kill word
  96. Surrounding Circumstances
  97. Liability-What makes the act wrong
  98. Jurisdiction-Municipal/County/State/Federal
  99. Grading-Degree
  100. Venue-Where prosecuted
  101. Law-As determined by law
  102. Result-Consequence of conduct, may be kill word
  103. Apply SOM, if any
  104. Constitution
  105. 4th Amendment (1791)-“Search and Seizure”
  106. “The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and* no Warrants shall be issued, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized”
  107. Governs only conduct of governmental agents, and applies to the states through the 14th Amendment (Mapp).
  108. Egbert Benson’s rejected substitution of “and no warrant shall issue” for “by warrants issuing” (Madison) inserted by committee.
  109. * “, and”-conjunctive or disjunctive?
  110. History
  111. Arose out of two separate problems-arrest and search per se
  112. Arrest-protect citizen-constables from tort liability
  113. Search per se-protect property
  114. Abatement of tools of religious, political, and economic suppression
  115. Designed to end writs of assistance and general warrants
  116. Combination of two issues is intended to place a magistrate between the people and the government both to protect privacy and legitimate lawful searches
  117. Rule established pre-police, creating tension not only between issues but between history and application
  118. Rooted in liberty, but of whom? From whom? To do what? And with what consequences to whom?
  119. Each theory of liberty (English concrete, French abstraction, and American pragmatism) tends to forget that liberty of the King’s subjects presupposes the establishment of the King’s peace.
  120. The balance in a 4th Amendment inquiry is between individual privacy and legitimate governmental interests
  121. Imposition upon liberty took the form of search & seizure, which required probable cause (pc).
  122. New category of stop and frisk, which imposed a mere reasonability standard, was introduced through Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).
  123. Reasonability of suspicion that suspect was armed warranted stop and frisk for a weapon despite lack of pc (limited frisk).
  124. Reasonability of suspicion dependent upon circumstances and officer’s experience.
  125. Focuses on reasonableness clause, not warrant clause (pc).
  126. Reasonability further augmented in Adams v. Williams, 407 U.S. 143 (1972), wherein a reliable informant stated a suspect had a gun. Officer reached for gun on informant’s word only. Lawful and reasonable as a protective measure and need not be done as an enforcement tactic (concealed weapons laws).
  127. Also focuses solely on reasonableness clause.
  128. Court ignored voluntary/involuntary element of search
  129. Balance of LE and privacy, broadened LE interests from Terry. Rehnquist decision under Burger expanded a Warren decision.
  130. At arrest, a complete search for weapons and evidence on arrestee’s person and in immediate vicinity is permitted, not limited to Terry frisk.
  131. Objects in plain view can be seized without a warrant.
  132. Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.S. 438 (1928)-Literal rendering of 4th Amendment
  133. No S&S as 1) no trespass and 2) no material object seized
  134. Strong dissents from Brandeis and Holmes have influence now
  135. Maxim of unclean hands as a rule of inaction
  136. Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967)
  137. Overrules Olmstead and institutes expectation of privacy rule.
  138. 4th Amendment does not create protected places (home) but protects a person from invasion whether in public or private.
  139. 4th Amendment not a blanket right to privacy
  140. Mandate established for antecedent justification for surveillance
  141. Warrantless searches must still meet probable cause requirement as though a warrant was issued (Wong Sun).
  142. Illegally seized evidence inadmissible as “fruit of the poisonous tree.” See Wong Sun.
  143. 14th Amendment (1868)-“due process” and “equal protection”
  144. Section 1: “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”
  145. Manson v. Brathwaite, 432 U.S. 98 (1977)
  146. Burden of proof to show illegality of identification procedures placed on defendant (shift from Wade).
  147. Five factors for evaluating identification procedures, plus Marshall’s 6th factor: Corruptive Effect of the process itself. This is a “totality of the circumstances” test.
  148. Opportunity of the witness to view the criminal at the time of the crime
  149. Witness’ degree of attention
  150. Accuracy of the prior description of the criminal
  151. Level of certainty demonstrated at the confrontation
  152. Lapse between crime and confrontation
  153. 5th Amendment (1791)-Self-incrimination
  154. “nor shall any person be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law”
  155. “in any criminal case” oscillates between words of illustration and words of limitation, no consistent treatment.
  156. History
  157. Evolved as response to ecclesiastical courts and common law self-incrimination
  158. Developed through William of Normandy’s conquest
  159. Ecclesiastical courts used accusatory process, king’s courts used inquisitorial process (trial by ordeal, oath, or battle)
  160. Retreat of church from ancient ordeal practices lead to trial by jury.
  161. Consent had to be “obtained” for jury trial
  162. Acts as a wild card in Constitutional analysis in letting the guilty go free with little or no social gain.
  163. Early tests for compliance in pre-trial encounters used totality of circumstances and voluntariness as guiding principles. Amorphous nature led to limited application. Focus here is on due process element and not self-incrim.
  164. Privilege is not enjoyed by corporations (documentation, Fisher)
  165. Right not to testify provides a corollary right to testify, but does not provide a right to testify falsely (Nix).
  166. Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)
  167. Expands right against self-incrim. to custodial interrogation
  168. Abolishes case-by-case approach and establishes rules for all subsequent interrogations
  169. Applies to any significant deprivation of freedom, but does not apply to general questions at a crime scene or to voluntary statements
  170. Rights advisory must precede any custodial interrogations
  171. Right to silence
  172. Admissibility of post-warning statements
  173. Right to counsel during interrogation
  174. Provision of counsel for indigents
  175. Privilege can be waived, but remains available
  176. Heavy burden on State to prove waiver
  177. Breaks in interrogation require new assertion of rights
  178. Exercise of privilege not prejudicial
  179. Enumerated rights are not constitutionally protected, but serve to protect 5th Amendment rights, barring a better process.
  180. Decision focuses on pressures of custodial encounters creating a compelling environment.
  181. Miranda applies to criminal proceedings pertaining to guilt or punishment only, and establishes deterrent mechanism through evidence exclusion.
  182. Pleading and Compulsion: North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (1970)
  183. Guilty pleas made solely to avoid death penalty are not considered compelled under the 5th Amendment.
  184. Test for a plea is whether a voluntary and intelligent choice is present
  185. No due process right (5th or 14th) to have a plea accepted by the court
  186. No due process right to jury trial in spite of plea
  187. 6th Amendment (1791)-Right to counsel
  188. “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right…to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.”
  189. History
  190. Originally only provided right to those who could afford an attorney to have one with them at trial. Has since been significantly broadened.
  191. Escobedo v. State of Illinois, 378 U.S. 478 (1964)
  192. Confined to its facts by Miranda, do not reference
  193. Established 6th Amendment shield to interrogation once counsel has been requested, even in a pre-trial encounter. Very limited in its application even before confinement
  194. United States v. Wade, 388 U.S. 218 (1967)
  195. In-court identification tainted by improper pre-trial/post-indictment line-up, once again invoking “fruit of the poisonous tree” idea.
  196. Counsel should be present at line-up in order to protect right to counsel and confrontation. Suspect not likely to identify prejudicial elements of line-up. Does not apply to fingerprinting, taking of blood, or evidentiary sampling as general knowledge of these processes allows for self-determination of prejudice.
  197. See five factors employed in Manson, they apply here.
  198. Burden for showing propriety of procedure placed on state (reversed in Manson)
  199. Role of Counsel
  200. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984)
  201. Two-pronged test for efficacy of counsel
  202. Incompetence
  203. Deficiency of such a scale that counsel cannot be seen as fulfilling 6th Amendment role
  204. Objective standard of reasonableness, “outside the range of professionally competent assistance”
  205. “reasonable under the circumstances” trumps appeal to any particular set of standards, and significant deference should be given to judgment of counsel
  206. Hindsight is not a factor, but rather the inquiry must put itself in attorney’s position at time of decision.
  207. Prejudice
  208. Inconsistent precedent (automatically granted if incompetence shown vs. heavy burden on defendant)
  209. Test involves reliance upon outcome of the proceeding
  210. Requires a reasonable probability that, but for the error in question, the result of the proceeding would have been different
  211. Not solely outcome determinative, but fairness of result must be considered as well.
  212. Nix v. Whiteside, 475 U.S. 157 (1986)
  213. Cert granted to evaluate 6th Amendment implications of counsel refusing to cooperate with presentation of knowingly perjurious testimony
  214. Breach of ethical standard alone does not justify breach of 6th Amendment right to counsel
  215. An attorney’s duty to advocate the defendant’s cause is “limited to legitimate, lawful conduct compatible with the very nature of a trial as a search for truth. Although counsel must take all reasonable lawful means to attain the objectives of the client, counsel is precluded from taking steps or in any way assisting the client in presenting false evidence or otherwise violating the law.”
  216. Attorney must attempt to dissuade a client from perjury when such an intention is announced.
  217. Wong Sun and Suppression
  218. Wong Sun v. United States, 371 U.S. 471 (1963)
  219. “fruit of the poisonous tree” exclusionary principles at work (on a 4th Amendment basis)
  220. “Whether, granting establishment of the primary illegality, the evidence to which instant objection is made has been come at by exploitation of that illegality or instead by means sufficiently distinguishable to be purged of the primary taint.”
  221. One can only reference his own personal rights when seeking exclusion of potentially tainted evidence. Evidence illegally secured from one person will be excluded for that person, but if it implicates another that other person cannot avail himself of the exclusion since his own rights were not infringed. An intervening event that breaks the chain of illegality purges the taint (attenuation)
  222. Suppression
  223. “Fruit of the poisonous tree” is applied to both 4th and 6th Amendment violations (Wong Sun and Wade, respectively).
  224. Look to Hale for 5th Amendment suppression
  225. See suppression drill in handout no. 3.
  226. Criminal Justice Theory
  227. Ideology of Criminal Justice
  228. Traditional-Just deserts; people are moral, knowing and free. Balance of good/evil
  229. Deontological; Kant
  230. Classical-Deterrence; people are rational, knowing and free. Balance of benefit/burden
  231. Utilitarian approach; Bentham and Mill
  232. Modern-Incapacitation/rehabilitation; people are determined (psych/econ). Balance of desirable/undesirable
  233. Post-Modern-deconstruction of self, no inherent meaning, values are subjective, renders civil liberties unintelligible
  234. Civil Liberty-Minimal governmental involvement
  235. Legality-Rule of Law
  236. Precept
  237. Rule-Layperson’s conception (12 people on a jury, bright line)
  238. Standard-Reasonability
  239. Principle-Presumption of innocence
  240. Doctrine-Consent
  241. Conception-classification (Civil v. Criminal)
  242. Classic Formulation
  243. Paul Feurbach (1775-1833)-Deterrence theory of criminal law (nullapoena sine logo, nullapoena sine criminale, nullumcrimen sine peonalegali; no punishment without law, no punishment without a crime, no crime without a legal punishment)
  244. Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832)-First law is Liberty (do anything you want, except for these enumerated prohibited actions); rather than punishing a deserving culpable citizen (just deserts)
  245. Theory
  246. Statement of principles (as a limitation on centralized power)
  247. Allocation of powers (distribution across legislative, executive, and judicial branches)
  248. Theory of criminal law (deterrence/just deserts/incapacitation)
  249. Roots
  250. Roman-Law as the regulation of procedures and punishments (codified with different rights and responsibilities for citizens, strangers, and the conquered; the conquered had the most individual freedom of action)
  251. Germanic-Law as reason, reason as custom (king was bound by reason)
  252. English Law-Magna Carta (1215); Petition of Right (1608); Glorious Revolution (1650) (ordered liberty)
  253. French-Law originally derived from royalty (royal prosecutors executing royal decrees; French Revolution ultimately displaced the “ancient regime” and distributed power. This is based on the French misunderstanding of the value of “separation of powers” in British law. This misunderstanding became the foundation of our legal system.)
  254. Puritan Law- Massachusetts Bill of Rights (1780); Joining of law and scripture; rule of law, not of man. How has this held up, when we consider the power of judges (individually and as groups behind the bench) in determining the law as opposed to Congress and the President.
  255. Criticism
  256. People as rational (hardly)-Rational person is the basis for neoclassical economic theory (laissez-faire market; golden hand), Marx argues that people are not rational but socioeconomically determined in their behavior, Freud point s to psychological factors undermining rationality of the individual. Theoretically the more educated (rational) a person the more rational and legal their behavior (counterexample provided is the current Wall Street crisis).
  257. Law can be set out clearly & simply (hardly)-There is a strong confusion in law between standards and rules. Requires constant revision and clarification, due to limits of language and changing social circumstances.
  258. A set of common values is available as a basis for the law-Idea has long since been outdated (Industrialization, mass transit, & technology have created a society with a vast array of values).
  259. Consequences
  260. Common Law Crimes-established judicially (1600-1860); power rendered legislative
  261. Strict Construction/Rule of Lenity-When you have an ambiguity that can be read two ways, must read in the light that is most favorable to the defendant.
  262. Rationalized as fair notice, limitation on court, and legislative mandate of Article I (absent in Article III)
  263. Vagueness-Semantic (fuzzy edges of meaning) and legal (ambiguity and vagueness void content)
  264. No ex post facto criminality
  265. No bills of attainder
  266. Presumption of innocence
  267. Actusreus/Mensrea
  268. State of Mind (SOM) in General
  269. Common Law Roots
  270. Model Penal Code (MPC)
  271. Reads in reckless for gap-filling purposes on conduct and liability (§ 2.02 (3))
  272. Applies strict to rest of S.C.
  273. Federal
  274. Old rule is Morissette-scienter
  275. Reads in knowingfor absent SOM on conduct (Bailey), liability (Staples), and result (Gypsum).
  276. Applies strict to grading (X-Citement), venue, and jurisdiction (Feola).
  277. Law is split on strict/knowing (bigamy/income).
  278. Affirmative defenses are implied, burden by preponderance on defendant (Bailey).
  279. States
  280. All over the place, no consistent approach
  281. Applies strict or reckless to grading
  282. Morissettev. United States, 342 U.S. 246 (1952)
  283. Establishes willingness to read in knowingly to fill in statutory SOM gaps (for conduct), rather than strict as requested by state.
  284. Defendant needed to somehow know that his behavior was wrong (sustaining theory of evil mind and evil act). Defendant not held liable for an honest mistake of fact (ownership of scrap metal).
  285. Strict only read in for regulatory crimes with minimal punishments and attached stigma (see Dotterweich).
  286. United States v. Bailey, 444 U.S. 394 (1980)
  287. Federal case, so conduct SOM missing in statute is read in as knowingly (when legislative intent absent or ambiguous)
  288. Recognizes gradation of culpable SOM from MPC (P,K,R,N)
  289. Knowing applied to “escape,” rebutting defendant insistence on specific intent for escape (purpose).
  290. Duress/necessity defenses inapplicable:
  291. Prison conditions not a sufficient threat to justify flight
  292. No justification given for continued absence
  293. United States v. X-Citement Video, Inc., 513 U.S. 64 (1994)
  294. Extends knowing across entire statutory section following it, including subsections, such that one must know that the material in question is a depiction that actually portrays a minor engaged in sexual acts. Denies “natural language” reading in favor of avoiding constitutional ambiguities (criminalizing innocuous behavior; maintaining 1st Amendment integrity) and to abiding the apparent legislative intent (punish those knowingly involved in child pornography trade).
  295. This reading is a response to apparent syntactical ambiguity
  296. Preserves strict liability for face-to-face sexual dealings with a minor, knowing only applied to depictions (only constitutionally mandated SOM).
  297. Mistake
  298. Fact
  299. Regina v. Prince
  300. People v. Olsen
  301. Tyson v. State
  302. Law
  303. Generally not a defense. Justice is meted out as though all citizens are aware of the law. To do otherwise would allow individual understandings of the law to overrule legislative and judicial opinion (See exculpation for more).
  304. Vicarious Liability
  305. White Collar Crime
  306. Horning v. District of Columbia, 254 U.S. 135 (1920)
  307. New York Central & Hudson River R. Co. v. United States, 685 P.2d 52 (Cal. 1984)
  308. United States v. Park, 421 U.S. 658 (1975)
  309. Causation
  310. People v. Warner-Lambert Co., 414 N.E.2d 660 (1980)
  311. Stephenson v. State, 179 N.E. 633 (1932)
  312. Exculpation
  313. Justification
  314. People v. Goetz
  315. State v. Kelly
  316. Excuse
  317. Insanity-Intoxication
  318. Attempt
  319. Complicity
  320. Conspiracy
  321. RICO

Outline-Criminal Law-Blakey-Fall 2009