Criminal Law with Ridolfi 2010

“BABY BEAR”

  1. What crimes did principals commit/attempt (substantial step + dual intent)?
  2. AR = Killing, MR:
  3. Murder (malice)
  4. 1st
  5. P+D
  6. Felony murder
  7. Capital
  8. 2nd
  9. Seriously bodily harm
  10. Depraved heart
  11. Manslaughter (malice negated)
  12. Voluntary
  13. Imperfect self defense
  14. Heat of passion
  15. Involuntary
  16. Rape
  17. AR: Sexual penetration and force/threat of force
  18. MR: General intent
  19. AC: Nonconsensual
  20. Assault (attempted battery)
  21. Solicitation
  22. AR: Asking (preparation)
  23. MR: Dual intent
  24. Conspiracy
  25. AR: Agreement + overt act
  26. MR: Dual intent
  27. Others
  1. What crimes/attempts (substantial step + dual intent) can be attributed to others through:
  2. Conspiracy
  3. Accomplice liability
  4. AR: Assistance
  5. MR: Dual intent
  1. What defenses are available?
  2. Generally
  3. Necessity (not for murder)
  4. Duress (not for murder)
  5. Intoxication (for specific intent only)
  6. Insanity
  7. Mistake of fact
  8. General intent = must be reasonable / not morally wrong
  9. Specific intent = as long as it's honest
  10. Murder
  11. Self defense
  12. Attempt/Accomplice Liability/Conspiracy
  13. Abandonment

------INTRODUCTION------

  1. What is criminal law?
  2. Punish social harms (results or conduct) with moral condemnation to set a minimum standard
  3. Types
  4. Malum in se = inherently wrong (CL)
  5. Malum prohibitum = wrong because we say so for regulatory purposes (public welfare)
  6. Strict liability (b/c hard to figure out mens rea for speeding)
  7. Minor penalty/stigma, so it’s ok to use it as a deterrent
  8. Principles of punishment
  9. Utilitarianism
  10. Deterrence(proportional)
  11. Specific
  12. Incapacitation
  13. Intimidation
  14. General
  15. Protection of society
  16. Rehabilitation
  17. Retributivism (just desserts, proportional)
  18. Statutory Interpretation
  19. Plain meaning
  20. Legislative intent
  21. Did they adopt CL? MPC?
  22. Progression of the law
  23. Precedent (binding and persuasive)
  24. Criminal Procedure
  25. Burden of production and persuasion
  26. Prosecutor: that crime’s elements were met “beyond a reasonable doubt”
  27. If not met, defendant is entitled to directed verdict of acquittal
  28. Can’t ask a jury to presume an element of the offense, but can ask them to infer from totality of circumstances (even circumstantial) (Owens= drunk and asleep in car with engine on = inference of drunk driving)
  29. Defendant: that there’s an affirmative defense (by preponderance of the evidence)
  30. If not met, the judge will not instruct the jury on that law
  31. Jury nullification

------ELEMENTS OF A CRIME------
D must have the necessary MR when he commits a volitional act which causes social harm (+ AC)

  1. Actus Reus (action)
  2. Elements
  3. Volitional act
  4. A willed act (you’re not blameworthy for things you can’t control, if you can prove that [Utter = couldn’t prove it was a conditioned response since he blacked out when he killed son])
  5. Time frame: take relevant acts into consideration, not just the last one, so it coincides with MR(Decina = MR to drive knowing you’re an epileptic pairs with the AR of crashing and killing people during a seizure)
  6. Causation of social harm
  7. Exception
  8. Omissions (failure to prevent harm as opposed to act which causes harm [Barber = taking someone off life support is an omission])
  9. Only count as AR where:
  10. Statute imposes a duty
  11. Status relationship imposes a duty
  12. Based on dependence(Beardsley= no duty over your mistress)
  13. Assumed a contractual duty to care for someone
  14. Voluntarily assumed care of a secluded person
  15. Why?
  16. Hard to prove MR and causation, good Samaritans can make things worse, value of autonomy(Kitty Genovese = bystander effect)
  17. Mens Rea (“guilty mind”/culpable mental state)

Specific Intent (beyond the AR) / General Intent / Strict Liability (no MR inquiry)
Motive (ex. taking w/ intent to deprive person of his property) / No specific intent beyond the culpability shown by AR (ex. intentional application of unlawful force upon another)
If intent for AR, then MR / CL = presumption that there is an implicit MR unless it's:
1. Regulatory/public welfare offense (ex. speeding) or
2. Statutory rape
Intent to commit future act (ex. entering w/ intent to commit a felony therein)
Knowledge of AC (ex. receipt of known stolen property) / MPC = assumes at least recklessness is required (won’t punish the negligent b/c not morally blameworthy)
  1. Types
  2. Purposeful (intentionally)
  3. Aware of the circumstances and it’s your conscious object to cause the result
  4. Can infer that D intended (purpose/knowledge) the foreseeable consequences of his actions(Conley= D intended disabling injuries when he hit A with a bottle in the face)
  5. Knowingly (intentionally)
  6. Wasn’t your desire, but you knew it was virtually certain to occur
  7. MPC and many courts say this includes willful blindness(rejected in Nations = D didn’t ask employee dancer if she was 18 and ostrich defense is ok)
  8. Aware of high probability of the existence of the fact and
  9. Deliberately fails to investigate = ostrich instruction
  10. Recklessness
  11. Aware and consciously disregarding an unjustified risk
  12. Negligence (only objective measure)
  13. RPP would know this is an unjustified risk, so it doesn’t matter if you did
  14. RPP has D’s unusual physical but not mental characteristics
  15. MPC also puts him in D’s subjective “situation”
  16. Transferred intent
  17. Legal fiction where “intent follows the bullet” even with bad aim
  18. Purpose is to put bad aim wrongdoer in position he would have been had his aim been good
  19. Not necessary b/c statutes don’t specify victims
  20. Statutory analysis
  21. Culpability vs elemental analysis
  22. Culpability = it is sufficient D committed AR in a manner demonstrating immorality or bad character (Regina v. Cunninghamtrial judge= It was wicked to pull gas meter from the wall for change)
  23. Elemental = you must meet the specific mental state of the statute (MPC)
  24. What does MR modify?
  25. If before a phrase, then generally the whole phrase
  26. Legislative intent, grammar, and justice matter (Flores= modifies all elements that follow except those in commas)
  27. MPC says every material element unless plainly otherwise
  1. Attendant Circumstances(fact, not action or mental state)
  2. The social harm has not been committed unless these are also met (ex. “while intoxicated” or having sex with a person “under 18”)

------MURDER------

  1. AR = Unlawful killing of a human being
  2. MR = With malice aforethought
  3. First Degree (express malice)
  4. Premeditated and Deliberate
  5. MR = purposeful(Forrest = D is guilty of 1st degree murder for shooting terminally ill father in hospital)
  6. How much time is required for P+D?
  7. Majority = some appreciable time to consider it(Guthrie= not P+D when dishwasher suffered a panic attack and stabbed his friend)
  8. Some Jx = an instant
  9. Felony-murder
  10. Definition: Guilty of murder that results from conduct during commission of a felony
  11. MR = strict liability (intent for felony = sufficient malice)
  12. Pros: Eases burden of proof, retribution, deters
  13. Cons: Harsh, arbitrary and unnecessary (can usually prove recklessness, so go for depraved heart murder!)
  14. CL limitations (since judges hate this rule)
  15. Only inherently dangerous felonies
  16. Majority = in abstract (Howard= traffic violations are not inherently dangerous)
  17. Minority = as applied
  18. In furtherance of a felony
  19. During commission of (or escape from) a felony(Fuller= D killed someone while escaping from a cop after stealing tires from locked cars)
  20. Consider time, distance, and causal relationship
  21. Agency (D or co-D must have caused death [Taylor = victim shot D after co-D’s insane chattering])
  22. Some just say proximate cause
  23. Accomplice liability doctrine
  24. Only if non-felons are killed
  25. Only for unlawful killings(Sophophone = cop killed co-D when D was in cop car)
  26. Capital murder
  27. Statutory aggravating and mitigating factors for a jury to consider after conviction of first degree murder (bifurcated process that channels jury discretion)(Gregg= doesn’t violate the 8th Am. If bifurcated process with statutory factors)
  28. DPC does not require state to eliminate racial disparities (slippery slope!) (McCleskey)
  29. Can’t sentence an insane D to death (unconstitutional)
  30. Second Degree (implied malice)
  31. Intent to cause serious bodily harm
  32. Depraved heart murder (extreme reckless/knowledge murder)
  33. Malice inferred from conscious disregard for human life(Knoller= knew dogs were dangerous and there was a risk to others—doesn’t matter what the probability was)
  34. Ex. Russian Roulette, Midgett = drunk regularly beats up his son until one day he kills him

------MANSLAUGHTER------

  1. AR = unlawful killing of a human being
  2. MR = without malice aforethought
  3. Voluntary (intentional + circumstances that negate malice)
  4. Imperfect self defense
  5. Honest but unreasonable belief that self defense was needed
  6. Sudden heat of passion causing adequate provocation (like an excuse defense to murder)
  7. CL = get instruction if 4-factor RPP test is met (objective/subjective)
  8. There must have been adequate provocation
  9. Objective/subjective
  10. From perspective of a RPP in D’s situation (i.e. sharing certain characteristics, but not biases), was D provoked to a certain level?
  11. The killing must have been in the heat of passion
  12. Majority = Objective
  13. How would a RPP (of D’s age and sex) react to that level of provocation?(Holley = alcoholism is no excuse for bf’s reaction to gf’s provocation of “I’m cheating and you don’t have the guts to do anything”)
  14. Minority = Subjective
  15. How would a RPP (of D’s age and sex)in D’s situationreact to that level of provocation? (Morgan Smith = what is the standard of control expected of a person with mental health problems?)
  16. Words alone are not enough(Girouard= army wife tells husband she wants out and asks what he’s going to do about it = no provocation)
  17. Informational (sometimes enough is super inflamatory, but no misdirected retaliation)
  18. Insulting
  19. It must be a sudden heat of passion (no reasonable opportunity to cool)
  20. Need causal connection between provocation, the passion, and the fatal act
  21. MPC (subjective)
  22. If D was under extreme emotional distress, then designedly ambiguous instruction (easier to get)
  23. Words alone are ok
  24. Consider:
  25. D’s internal situation (room for handling diminished capacity Ds)
  26. How D perceived external circumstance (mitigate for honest mistakes)
  27. Ultimately: Can D’s loss of self control arouse sympathy in ordinary citizen?(Casassa = D obsessed w/ ex and killing her is too peculiar to warrant mitigation)
  28. Involuntary(aka unintentional)
  29. Gross Negligence (CL) / Recklessness (MPC)
  30. Unconscious of an unjustifiable risk that is a gross deviation from RPP (Hernandez = stickers about drinking are inadmissible because what matters is if he knew effect his drinking would have on others, not on him)
  31. Misdemeanor manslaughter (not in the MPC)

------RAPE------

  1. Policy concerns
  2. Penalty is so high so we want to be sure
  3. BUT don’t want to put the victim on trial or blame her
  1. Pre- and Post-Reform Elements

Pre-Reform / Post-Reform
Purpose /
  • Punish as violence
  • Focus on the victim
/
  • Also a crime against autonomy/privacy
  • Shifts focus from the victim

AR:
1. Sexual penetration and
2. Force or threat of force
Timeline matters (Alston = threats earlier or force in the past are not relevant) /
  • Resistance to the "utmost"
  • Victim's fear
/
  • Force however slight, no resistance required
  • If there's no "yes" then force inherent in sex could be enough (MTS = she consented to foreplay but did not say "yes" to sex = rape)
  • RPP's fear

AC: Nonconsensual
Freely given w/out coercion
(so not minor, under the influence, induced by fraud, unconscious, incompetent…) /
  • Totality of circumstances (Berkowitz = dorm room, many "no's" but no forcible compulsion = not rape)
/
  • “No” means “no”
  • Withdrawn consent = rape if victim:
  1. Expressed objection,
  2. Tried to stop, and
  3. Defendant persisted (even w/out "force")
  4. Primal urge rejected: how long?
(John Z = she kept saying she had to go and he kept asking for a minute to finish = rape)
MR:
General Intent(moral culpability) / AR proves MR /
  • Mistake of fact only allowed if:
  • Good faith (subjective) and
  • Reasonable (objective/RPP)
So there must evidence of equivocal conduct by the victim (Williams = mutually exclusive defenses to claim consensual and mistake of fact)
Marital immunity / Yes / Majority = No
What's Admissible Re: Victim? /
  • Prior consensual w/ D
  • Consensual w/ others
  • Sexual reputation
/
  • Prior consensual acts w/ D (relevant to MR)
  • Rape Shield Laws
  • Not about the victim, just this one act

  1. MPC
  2. Not usually followed (adopted pre-reform in 1962)
  3. AR = sex with someone:
  4. less than 10
  5. unconscious / under the influence
  6. compelled by force or threat (to her or third party)
  7. MR = purposefully, knowingly, or recklessly
  8. Partial marital immunity

------INCHOATE OFFENSES------

  1. Definition= imperfectly formed / not completed
  1. Assault
  2. CL = the name for attempted battery
  3. D must have present ability (can’t be currently impossible)
  4. D must be within reach of P
  5. MPC = N/A, simply “attempted battery”
  6. Attempted assault
  1. Attempt(sentence is half of completed crime)

mere preparation ------attempted <target offense> ------completed target offense

  1. Types
  2. Complete (ex. gun misfires, but you did everything you could)
  3. Incomplete (actor is prevented by an intervening cause like the cops)
  4. Competing policy concerns
  5. Late intervention
  6. More certain attempted crime was real and conviction is justified
  7. Encourages abandonment
  8. Early intervention
  9. Public safety
  10. They’re still a little blameworthy even if they might have turned back
  11. AR
  12. Approaches
  13. Objectivist (the AR must speak for itself = late intervention)
  14. Subjectivist (MR is key, so only need enough AR to prove it = early intervention)
  15. Tests (pick the one that gives result you want based on policy concern)
  16. Spatial Closeness Tests
  17. Last Act (old)
  18. You’ve done all you can do and there’s no turning back
  19. Ex. solicitiation
  20. Dangerous Proximity
  21. About how much is left to do, not how much has been done (Peaslee= mere collection of materials to set on fire is not enough since D never got within .25 miles of the place)
  22. Consider degree of potential harm and closeness to victim (Rizzo= robbers were looking for their victim but they didn’t find him before the cops got them, so no attempt)
  23. Subjectivist Test
  24. Only need enough AR to be comfortable MR is met
  25. MPC Substantial Step
  26. Must take a substantial step (doesn’t matter where in time or space) (Reeves= rat poison next to teacher’s coffee = attempt b/c no lawful purpose for having it there)
  27. Concern is what has already been done, not what remains to be done
  28. MPC offers a list of circumstances where you can infer attempt:
  29. Lying in wait / searching for or following the victim / recon
  30. Unlawfully entering the place the crime is to be committed
  31. Possessing materials for the crime if have no lawful purpose for D
  32. Objectivist Test (Res Ipsa Loquitur)
  33. Act needs to speak for itself and show a 3rd person that D unequivocally intends to attempt the crime
  34. MR = dual intent
  35. Intent to commit the acts that constitute the actus reus of an attempt and
  36. Specific intent required to commit target offense (Gentry= for murder, D needs specific intent to kill, not just intent to inflict seriously bodily) (ex. malice is not enough for murder)
  37. Can’t specifically intend an unintentional (reckless/negligent) act
  38. Ex. No attempted felony murder or involuntary manslaughter
  39. Can you specifically intend a strict liability offense, like statutory rape, or a general intent offense, like assaulting an undercover officer?
  40. Some say only if you know the AC (higher level of culpability than is required for the target offense) or moral wrong doctrine applies
  41. Others say no
  42. NOTE: Transferred intent does not apply to attempts! (evidence problems)
  43. Specific defenses
  44. Impossibility (ex. To Catch A Predator)
  45. Abandonment (McCloskey = prisoner stopped trying to escape while still within the prison = no attempt)
  46. Only if voluntary (not just b/c a cop is watching…motive matters!) and complete
  47. Why?
  48. Encourage people to have second thoughts
  49. They are no longer dangerous
  1. Solicitation(can have attempted solicitation)
  2. AR: as soon as you ask someone to commit the target offense (preparation)
  3. If they say YES, then solicitation often merges with CONSPIRACY
  4. If they say NO, then still guilty of solicitation
  5. MR: dual intent
  6. Intent to ask another person to commit the target offense and
  7. Specific intent to have the other person complete the target offense
  8. See attempt MR for qualifications
  9. Conspiracy (CL does not merge with completed offense, but MPC does)
  10. Definition = an agreement between two or more persons to commit an unlawful act or to commit a lawful act by unlawful means (must occur prior to the act)
  11. Types
  12. Chain = one conspiracy
  13. Community interest (normally the object each desires cannot succeed unless each link performs)
  14. Parties either know the others or must have known that others were involved based on the nature/scope of the conspiracy
  15. Ex. drug trafficking
  16. Wheel with a rim = one big conspiracy
  17. Rim is only present if the spokes see their involvement as part of a community interest (not just parallel objectives between similarly situated ppl)
  18. Ex. Abortionist and minions finding women (since their jobs depended on the success of the broader illegal venture)
  19. Wheel w/out a rim is = many small chain conspiracies(Kilgore= can’t admit one spoke’s hearsay against another)
  20. Spokes do not know of each other since each spoke’s success is only dependent on the hub
  21. Ex. Loan sharks
  22. Policies (may extend to unilateral…MPC does, so feigned or misunderstood agreement counts, but not coerced)
  23. Groups are more dangerous than individuals (more efficient, less likely to abandon), so stronger sentence and procedural benefits (hearsay of co-conspirators is admissible)
  24. Early intervention (even earlier than attempt)
  25. AR
  26. Prior agreementto commit a target offense and
  27. Can be express or implied/tacit (does it have to be specific or can it be general?)
  28. Can infer agreement from circumstantial evidence: (Azim = D kept car running while A beat up B, so earlier agreement is inferred and overt act is driving A away)
  29. Association with conspirators
  30. Knowledge of the crime
  31. Presence at the scene of the crime
  32. Participation in the object of the conspiracy
  33. One conspiracy charge for each agreement(Braverman = can have multiple crimes as the object of one agreement—usually initial agreement is treated as implicitly incorporating later objectives)
  34. Usually an overt act
  35. May be trivial and wholly preparatory (like soliciting someone else)
  36. One conspirator’s overt act is enough to prosecute every member of the conspiracy, even those who joined after the overt act
  37. MR = dual intent
  38. Intent to agree and
  39. Specific intent to accomplish the target offense(Swan= no conspiracy to commit implied malice murder b/c no intent to kill)
  40. See attempt MR for qualifications
  41. Can’t conspire to commit attempt
  42. Knowledge of the conspiracy by a supplier is not enough UNLESS:
  43. Serious crime or
  44. Intent inferred from:(Lauria = no conspiracy where answer service knew prostitutes used it for their work but did not encourage or disproportionately gain from it)
  45. Stake in the outcome,
  46. Unusually high volume or
  47. Nature of the goods is such that there is no legitimate use for them
  48. Why? B/c don’t want to punish those carrying on a lawful business in a profitable manner unless the crime/magnitude is serious or they have criminal motives
  49. Specific defenses(CL = to future acts of co-conspirators, but not to the conspiracy itself)
  50. Conspiracies only end if:
  51. Target offense is completed or
  52. D has effectively abandoned/withdrawn by:
  53. Communicating as much to all co-conspirators and
  54. In some Jx, doing something to thwart the conspiracy
  55. Effect of ending a conspiracy:
  56. Still guilty of conspiracy
  57. No longer liable for future acts of co-conspirators
  58. Impossibility
  59. Effect
  60. Guilty of conspiracy and
  61. Guilty of the crimes of co-conspirators (CL):
  62. Committed in furtherance of the conspiracy (within the scope and a foreseeable consequence of the agreement) (Pinkerton = D was in jail but still liable for acts of co-conspirators b/c never withdrew)
  63. No actual assistance required
  64. Mergers(note: all have dual intent)

Solicitation
(preparation) / Conspiracy
(overt act) / Attempt
(substantial step in furtherance) / Completed Crime
Solicitation / -- / Some Jx / No / Yes
Conspiracy / Some Jx / -- / No / No
Attempt / No / No / -- / Yes
Completed Crime / Yes / No / Yes / --

------Accomplice Liability------