[Nature of Law, Crime, and Punishment]
· Importance of jurisprudential and policy issues
· Note: Only actors with discretion may use policy concerns in their decisions
Goals of Criminal Law
Deterrence
1. General (society)
2. Specific (individual)
Rehabilitation
Incapacitation/incarceration: Take them out of society where they can’t do harm
Retribution justice/desert: The need to give punishment that they merit
Potential Conflicts: Potential conflicts between these various considerations
· Incapacitation and just punishment may conflict
· Rehabilitation may conflict with the notion of retribution
o What incentives to criminals have to be rehabilitated if they are not released
· Retribution interferes with deterrence because deterrence might be achieved through grossly harsh punishments
Goals of Criminal Law and the Death Penalty
Considerations
· Does the person have a disability?
· Is the person a juvenile?
· Are there aggravating circumstances?
o Killing for financial gain, killing a police officer/prison guard, killing more than one person, killing in order to escape from custody or arrest, history of violence
· Are there mitigating circumstances?
o Doubt about guilt, turbulent family history, severe emotional disturbances, good behavior while awaiting trial, commission of crime under duress or the influence of drugs/alcohol
Arguments FOR capital punishment:
· Deterrence
· Retribution
· Incapacitation
Arguments AGAINST capital punishment:
· Discrimination in application (race, class)
o McClesky v. Kemp – statistics show that discrimination based on race of the victim (Ds who kill white victim more likely to get death penalty)
§ Majority opinion: Requires individualized proof of discrimination
· Costs more than life in prison (appeals, etc.)
[Elements for Criminal Liability]
Actus Reas
A voluntary act
· CANNOT be an involuntary reflex
o Examples: Sleepwalking
o People v. Newton- plane inadvertently landed in NY; D was involuntarily in NY with a gun à cannot be charged with violating NY law
· Mere thoughts do not count
· Words can be actions – “shoot em”
o Some crimes are solely committed by the act of speech
· Act under duress is still a voluntary act
Omission or failure to act can have criminal liability if
· Statute
o Example: good Samaritan laws; tax returns
· Contract
o Example: lifeguard, nurse
· Relationship between the parties
o Child, spouse
§ Jones v. US – Son in poor health and severe neglect dies à charged caretaker with involuntary manslaughter
· Voluntary assumption of risk/ beginning to rescue
o Particularly if it prevents others from rescuing
o Example: Say “I am going to rescue you” see its somebody you don’t like and then swim away
· Where your conduct creates peril
o Example: pushing someone into a pool knowing that they cannot swim
Intoxication
· Involuntary – no actus reas
· Voluntary – actus reas present; may not have mens rea defense
o Trier of fact usually not in the favor of this argument
Mens Rea
· Culpable state of mind; desire or intent to commit an unlawful act
· Factual information is key: What did D know and understand?
Statutory language
· Intentionally or with intent to
· Knowingly or with knowledge that
· Frequently or with the intent to defraud
· Purposefully or for the purpose of
· Willfully, maliciously, or comply
· Without intent [use objective standard]
o Reckless – gross or outsized negligent
o Negligently
Degree of fault
· Subjective fault
o Actual bad mind or intent to cause harm
o Does not need to be reasonable
· Objective Fault
o Recklessly or negligently caused harm
o Court can say a “reasonably prudent person: would NOT have done that act
· Strict liability
o Liability without regard to the state of mind; one CANNOT offer a mens rea defense
§ Example: statutory rape
· Knowledge of the age is not required, nor is a reasonable belief that the victim was over the age a consent. Even a reasonable mistake is not a defense
o Malum prohibitum crimes (wrong because they are prohibited) and “public welfare” crimes
o Example: violating traffic safety regulations
o The only defense permitted is an actus reas defense
o How to know when it is a strict liability crime:
o The crime is administrative, regulatory, or moral
o No adverbs in the statute
Intent Requirement
Larceny intent to permanently deprive rightful owner of property
· Be aware that the property belonged to another, intent to deprive forever
· Even an unreasonable mistake of fact could be a defense in some jurisdictions
Negligent homicide; negligently causes another’s death
· The extent to which the individual deviated from a reasonable standard of care
Specific Intent and General Intent Crimes
Specific Intent Crime
· Intent to bring about a specific result/harm
o Example: attempt, first degree murder, embezzlement, robbery burglary
o Example: Larceny
§ Intent to permanently deprive rightful owner of property (must know that she is not entitled to it)
o Example: burglary
§ Actor must have broke and entered with the intention of committing a felony therein
· Defense can be formed around the notion that the actor didn’t intend the particular result
General Intent Crime (catch all category)
· Intent to commit an action but not necessarily to bring about result
· Example: Involuntary manslaughter
Transferred Intent
· Meant to kill a man but accidentally kill the woman next to her
o Two crimes – murder for the dead woman; attempted murder for the man
· NEVER MERGE ANY CRIMES THAT HAVE DIFFERENT VICTIMS
Defenses to Mens Rea and Actus Reas Elements
Intoxication
· Voluntary – there IS actus reas
o Self-induced (includes addicts/alcoholics)
o Defenses only to specific intent crimes
§ MAY negate the mens rea required by the crime
· Courts VERY reluctant to do this
· Involuntary—NO actus reas
o Forced to drink, or something dropped into the drink
o Defenses to ALL crimes (including strict liability)
Mistake of Fact
· Can negate liability EXCEPT in strict liability crimes
· Is a defense against liability if it negates the mens rea required to commit the crime
o Specific Intent Crime – Even an unreasonable mistake of fact can negate intent
§ Example: Larceny requires a knowledge that the property belongs to another SO if he thinks it is his and takes it that is an honest and unreasonable AND can be a used as a defense
o General Intent Crime – Only a reasonable mistake of fact can negate the required intent
§ Example: Rape; unreasonable mistake of fact would not serve as a defense BUT a reasonable mistake of fact would serve as a defense
Gordon v. State: Boy did not know that he was not able to vote because he didn’t know his real age
Mistake of Law
· No excuse; CANNOT be a mens rea defense
· Rationale: Inherent difficulty of proving whether or not the defendant knew of the law; makes all law abiding citizens responsible for all laws;
· Exception:
o Ignorance of the law is a defense IF it negates the mens rea required to commit a crime
§ BUT most crimes do not require proof that the defendant was aware of the law SO it RARELY negates mens rea
o IRS allows good faith mistake of the law to be a defense
o People v. Wendt: D charged with willfully failing to file a return of income tax à willfully here means that D did not do something although he was aware it was a legal requirement
o When the law is not published (no significance today)
o When the mistake arises from a reasonable reliance on:
o A statute that is later determined to be invalid
o A court decision
o A public official who is in a position to interpret the statute
§ Example: attorney
[Homicide]
· Intent to kill OR intent to do serious bodily harm
· Difference between 1st degree murder and voluntary manslaughter
o Provocation
· Difference between depraved heart murder and involuntary manslaughter
o Depraved heart murder: Requires a plan and strong likelihood of death
o Involuntary manslaughter: A high degree of likelihood of substantial harm
1st Degree Murder
Elements
· Premeditated unlawful killing of a human being by another human with malice aforethought
· Malice aforethought = defendant intended to kill
· Specific Intent Crime (because of malice requirement)
· Premeditated and deliberate
Defenses
· Make the case that the defendant did not have premeditated thoughts
Important Considerations
· What did D do prior to the killing (example: planning)
· Prior relationship/conduct with the victim from which the jury can determine “motive”
· Nature of killing from which the jury could infer there was “preconceived notion”
Felony Murder
· Generally a subset of 1st Degree Murder
· Allowed when there are predicate felonies
o Arson, burglary, kidnapping, rape, or robbery
· Applicable when murder is the inadvertent result of a felony (or attempted felony?)
· In commission requirement
o Many jurisdictions define duration of the felony to continue until the felon reaches “a place of temporary safety”
· Rationale: Intended to deter negligent and accidental killings during commission of felonies
· People v. Robertson – D shot gun in the direction of people trying to steal his car à found guilty of felony murder because it was a felony to recklessly shoot your gun up into the air
Where one felon is killed by a non-felon (victim or police), courts disagree on whether the other felon is liable for felony-murder
· Majority Approach: Agency Doctrine
o Felony murder does NOT apply when “death directly caused by an innocent person”
o Only way felony murder applies is if the agent or accomplice in the underlying felony commits the murder
o Defendant is NOT liable for the death of a co-felon as the result of resistance on police
o Also – police killing felon is lawful – robber cannot be charged with a lawful act
· Minority Approach: Proximate-Cause Theory
o Felony murder CAN be applied to death caused by non-felon
o Causation + felonious state of mind is all that is required
o Rationale: By committing the underlying felony the defendant has proximately caused the homicidal act
o State v. Sophophone: Dissent argued that “D had set in motion dangerous events” EVEN THOUGH D was in the back of police car at time of death
Defenses to Felony Murder
· Defense to underlying felony = defense to felony murder
· The felony they are committing must be something OTHER THAN killing
· The deaths must be foreseeable (causation)
· Once the defendant has reached a point of temporary safety, no longer in the window for felony murder
o Example: Spends the night at mom’s house
2nd Degree Murder
Elements
· Reckless activity, subjective appreciation of the risk
· No premeditation OR
· Premeditation intending to cause seriously bodily injury to the person
· If danger is completely obvious and a reasonably prudent person would know the risk and jury can make the inference that the defendant understood/was aware of the risk/danger
Depraved Heart Murder
Elements
· Reckless activity with appreciation of the risk (subjective standard)
· Requires subjective appreciation of the risk
o BUT fact finder may infer appreciation of the risk
o People v. Knoller: Dog owners warned the dogs are dangerous; dogs attack and kill a woman à D found to have “conscious disregard for life”
o Commonwealth v. Malone: Russian roulette; D thought bullet was in 5th chamber but it went off at 3rd shot; jury found a callous disregard for life
· You CANNOT have attempted depraved heart murder
Prosecution’s Role
· Make the case that the danger is patently obvious
· Argue elements of awareness
o Difficult to prove subjective awareness
Voluntary Manslaughter
Elements
· Deliberate unlawful killing that is the result of provocation (provoking element)
· Partially mitigated by provocation
o Rationale: Someone should be convicted of a lesser offense if they are provoked
· Does NOT require a subjective appreciation of the risk
· NOT an appropriate charge if there has been a “cooling off” period
o Ask: Would a reasonable person have cooled off?
o Children and mentally retarded have a different standard (?)
· Killing from passion (ALWAYS must be passion)
o Modern Approach:
§ Look at the context
§ Test: Would a reasonable person be provoked to commit homicide under those circumstances
o Traditional Approach:
§ Provocative Acts
§ Battery
§ Mutual combat
§ Assault
§ Illegal arrest – modern trend is to discount this
§ Adultery
§ Injuries to close relatives
o State v. Thronton: Husband shoots man having sex with his wife à adultery is often an provoking event in voluntary manslaughter
Involuntary Manslaughter
§ Hard to draw a line between involuntary manslaughter and depraved heart murder
o Commonwealth v. Welansky: Emergency exists were locked, nightclub full over capacity; fire kills people à nightclub owner found guilty of involuntary manslaughter b/c he should have known (objective standard)
o Commonwealth v. Feinberg: Knows the customers are drinking poisonous product à charged with involuntary manslaughter
Elements
§ Unintentional killing involving recklessness or gross negligence
o Example: Drive 100 miles per hour and kill someone
§ Sometimes involving unlawful acts NOT in felony murder statute
§ Various terms used to describe the mens rea requirement
o Wantonness, willfulness, recklessness, indifference, disregard, culpable negligence, criminal negligence, gross negligence
§ Does NOT require subjective awareness of the risk
[Rape]
§ Common law: Unlawful sexual intercourse with a woman against her will by force or threat of immediate force
Statutory Changes
§ Allowing wives to charge for rape
o Though less serious penalties for husbands usually
o People v. M.D.: Marital rape with egg