Criminal Law Outline
Criminal Law Outline
Criminal Law Outline
750.73 Burning of other real property, provides: Any person who wilfully or maliciously burns any building
or other real property, or the contents thereof, other than those specified in the next preceding section of this chapter,
the property of himself or another, shall be guilty of a felony, punishable by imprisonment in the state prison for not
more than 10 years.
2 INTERPRETATION: (1) It could be that the burning down of a dwelling place to be the basic crime, and the
burning down of other real property was the aggravated crime.
(2) But it is also conceivable that the Michigan legislature that we dont want prosecutors people who burn down
dwellings to get a break.
This is the way the Michigan court read the statute.
ISSUE: Was this a valid acquittal?
MAJORITY: Yes, even though the Michigan Appellate Court said that the acquittal was for an invalid
reason.
DISSENT: Alito says NO.
DOUBLE JEOPARDY ISSUE: The rule is if jeopardy attaches and then terminates, a person cannot again be
put in jeopardy for the same offense.
Jeopardy attaches in a jury trial when the first juror is selected and sworn (not when the whole panel
is selected).
Jeopardy terminates with an acquittal.
And an acquittal is an outcome in favor of D, whether correct or not.
DOUBLE JEOPARDY What does it take for Double Jeopardy to Initiate?
In bench trials The first witness is presented
In jury trials When the first juror is sworn in
When does Double Jeopardy Trigger?
At the determination of the non-existence of any of the elements
EXCEPTION: MANIFEST NECSSITY: a circumstance (as an incurable pleading defect,
the unavailability of an essential witness, juror misconduct, or illness of counsel) which is of
such an overwhelming and unforeseeable nature that the conduct of trial or reaching of a
fair result is impossible and which necessitates the declaration of a mistrial
If there is a manifest necessity for the declaration of a mistrial, D may be retried without
violation of the prohibition on double jeopardy.
LESSER INCLUDED OFFENSES The offense charged must include every element of the lesser offense, plus an
additional element or elements, so that one cannot commit the offense charged without committing the lesser offense.
A lesser included offense of another offense are the SAME for double jeopardy purpose.
This term is used not in the double jeopardy bar from a retrial for the same offense, but instead to bar
the separate punishment of the same offense.
When Double Jeopardy triggers, there can be NO PROSECUTION of an offense if it is the same as the old one.
TEST: Look at the ELEMENTS If the same elements apply, it is is the same offense.
LIMITATION: SOVEREIGNTY Double Jeopardy does not apply when different sovereigns
prosecute.
State A and State B may prosecute
State A and Federal Government may prosecute
State A and Indian Territory may prosecute
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2.
3.
4.
5.
a. If the entire section/part is silent, then that is a good indication that mens rea is NOT
dispensed of.
b. Passive voice is more likely to equate to strict liability
NATURE OF THE OFFENSE: Whether the conduct is inherently bad malum in se
(requires a mens rea) or is bad solely due to the statute (less likely to require a mens rea)
SEVERITY OF THE PUNISHMENT: the more severe, the more likely that mens rea is required
Consider whether the conduct at issue is innocent conduct or is an accidental consequence of a
harmful act
a. The latter is less likely to require a mens rea.
b. Ex. D1 is driving home from shopping. D2 is running away from a robbery.
i. Mens rea would probably be required for the D1 because they want to make it
harder for to convict innocent people.
Consider the structure of the statute:
a. Ex. You are trying to determine the level of culpability for first degree murder If the
second degree murder requires knowing, we can determine that first degree murder
require at least knowing and probably more than that.
The prosecution may find that mistakes at hospital are reasonably foreseeable, and
may expect the jury to find D liable.
State v. Rose NO CAUSATION
FACTS: D hit a victim. The victim (1) hit the hood of the car and then (2) got rolled over by the car.
D subsequently fled the scene of the crime.
STATUTE: Every person who commits manslaughter shall go to prison.
MANSLAUGHTER: an unintentional homicide without malice aforethought, committed either in performance of
an unlawful act not amounting to a felony or in the performance of a lawful act with criminal negligence.
This is the little sibling of felony murder rule.
THEORY OF MANSLAUGHTER: The theory is that the victim was killed BECAUSE D left the scene of the
accident. Leaving the scene of the crime was what caused the victims death.
Thus the prosecution would have to prove that the victim died AFTER D fled the scene.
ISSUE: We cannot tell whether or not the victim was dead when D fled the scene.
HOLDING: D is NOT criminally liable.
REASONING: There is no causation here since we do not know whether the victim was killed instantly
or not.
If the victim had died when he hit the hood of the car, then the D did not kill anybody when the person had
left the scene of the crime because the victim was already dead.
Here, we just dont know what the victim died instantly or not.
CHIN: Maybe the prosecution could have pointed towards speeding (which is another unlawful act), and would have
solved the temporal problem (if he had been speeding down the road, then he was already committing an unlawful
act when he hit the person and killed him under the car.)
INCOMPLETE CRIMES
Some offenses do not involve results; they punish only conduct.
Ex. Drug possessionno result, like use or distribution, is necessary.
Other offenses punish EFFORTS to achieve prohibited results or engage in unlawful conduct.
These crimes punish attempts and agreements to achieve unlawful goals and as well as requests that others
commit crimes.
3 TYPES OF INCOMPLETE CRIMES: M.P.C.
(1) SOLICITAITON A command, encouragement or request for another to commit the crime.
(2) CONSPIRACY 2 PARTS: (A) An agreement to commit the crime.
(B) An act in furtherance thereof.
This incomplete crime requires 2 people.
Ex. A and B conspire to murder.
B gets a gun.
A could be criminally liable for Bs in the furtherance of getting the gun.
To the extent that crimes are committed in furtherance of the conspiracy, liability gets
imputed to EVERYONE.
LIMIT: This does NOT apply to undercover agents.
(3) ATTEMPT A substantial step toward the commission of that crime.
Ex. If I buy a gun, decided to shoot someone, and get caught while I am in the victims house with the gun, I
am liable for attempted murder.
People v. Stroner When Person A and Person B conspire to commit a crime, and Person B shoots at the
victim, Person A can be convicted of attempted murder.
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DOUBLE JEOPARDY: Incomplete crimes are not lesser included offenses of one another.
You can get charged with all of them at the same time.
COMMON LAW You may be convicted of multiple incomplete crimes.
MPC You may be punished for only one of these
CA You may be punished for only one, but it must be the one with the longest prison term.
People v. Stroner FACTS: D was a cop who hired someone to kill somebody else.
Before the killing could take place, he was arrested.
He is charged with all 3 offenses (1) Solicitation for murder (D approach McAllister to kill the victim), (2)
attempted murder (McAllister shot at the victim), (3) and conspiracy to commit murder (D consulted
McAllister to commit murder and also gave him a shotgun to do it).
TRIAL COURT: Convicted him of all three.
APPELLATE COURT: Held that solicitation for murder was a lesser included crime of conspiracy to
commit murder, and that conspiracy to commit murder was a lesser included crime of attempted murder.
ISSUE: Can D be convicted of all of these offenses?
IL SC HOLDING: CONVICTION UPHELD.
COMMON LAW None of these are lesser included crimes of each other and D could be convicted
of ALL OF THEM.
NOTE: There are a lot of jurisdictions that DO NOT FOLLOW Bachelder and Bordenkircher.
There are jurisdictions where there are 2 separate statutes prohibiting the same conduct and yet carrying
different sentences (Bachelder) and the court will say that this has to be a mistake and the Legislature
could not have intended for there to be 2 statutes that mean the same thing.
These USSC cases do set a constitutional basis, but their BINDING EFFECT is LIMITED.
DISCRETION BY OTHER GROUPS:
(1) JUDGES They have discretion as well.
They may acquit de minimus charges if it is authorized by the statute.
DE MINIMUS STATUTES MPC says that a court may DISMISS a valid case based on its discretion.
This is used almost exclusively in low-level cases.
PURPOSE OF THE STAUTE: As a defense attorney, even if you have no chance of getting the
judge to accept the de minimus motion, you may want to raise it anyway in order to educate the
judge on the case.
(2) JURIES Juries have the right to jury nullification This is when a person is guilty of all of the
elements of the crime, and yet, a jury does not want to convict the person.
Ex. They may decide to not prosecute a thief who stole a piece of bread simply to feed his family.
The jury has the unreviewable power to acquit (Dean).
PROBLEM: They are not informed of this constitutional power.
Most of the time, judges and prosecution will instruct juries that they must follow the
facts and the law without deviation.
Defense attorneys are NOT entitled to educate or advise juries of their own
powers.
However, PROSECUTION is principled.
US General Attorneys Prosecution Manual:
There are non-binding legal scholarly works that instruct prosecutors on how they should go about their job.
They make it the case that not every case should AUTOMATICALLY be prosecuted.
On the other hand, the discretion should NOT be ARIBTRARY.
JURISDICTION
JURISDICTION OVER THE PERSON
This is one of the types of jurisdiction.
INDIVIDUAL STATES may control the conduct of their citizens over the high seas so long as:
1. They have a legitimate state interest
2. Theres no conflicting Federal law
Skiriotes v. Florida
The analysis may apply in different situations
States can theoretically prosecute an individual anywhere in the world.
Ex. Missouri can punish a Missouri citizen for going to Oregon to smoke
weed.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT may control the conduct of a citizen anywhere in the world as long as:
An enumerated power justifies the governments activity
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US v. Kent
Generally, the federal government will allow this regulation under the treaty clause This is
the most vast unenumerated power.
Skiriotes v. Florida STATES SCOPE OF JURISDICTION = Crime Happened Beyond State Borders
ACTS: D violated the statute 2 leagues from the shore.
FLORIDA BORDER: The border is 3 leagues.
STATUTE: forbids the use of diving suits, helmets or other apparatus used by deep sea divers, for the purpose of
taking commercial sponges from the Gulf of Mexico, or the Straits of Florida or other waters within the territorial
limits of that State.
ISSUE: We need a jurisdictional hook. Florida cannot, by its own intrinsic power, govern or regulate activity in
the Gulf of Mexico.
D alleges that the United States border is 1 league.
Thus, he alleges that since he was out of the jurisdiction of the United States, he was out of the
jurisdiction of Florida.
USSC: CONVICTION UPHELD.
REASONING: D is a Florida citizen.
The Court concedes that he is NOT in Florida territorial waters.
He is on the HIGH SEAS.
Even if it were assumed that the locus of the offense was outside the territorial waters of
Florida, it would not follow that the State could not prohibit its own citizens from the use of the
described divers equipment at that place.
AKA It doesnt matter that D was outside of Floridas border when he committed the crime.
Florida can still convict him.
US v. Kent Frank FEDERAL GOVERNMENTS SCOPE OF JURISDICTION = Crime Happened Outside of
U.S.
STATUTE: Prohibits people from US traveling to other countries for the purpose of sex tourism.
US is a country of limited jurisdiction.
GROUNDS OF AUTHORITY: Optional Protocol A US treaty that forbade that forbade sex tourism.
If the US validly signs a treaty with a foreign country, then the US has the power to enact laws that implement to
regulate something that they otherwise would not be able to.
Missouri v. Holland If a US treaty is constitutional, then any statute that implements that treaty is also
constitutionally valid.
LIMIT: (1) No treaty can do something that the Constitutional expressly forbids.
However, treaty power CAN allot power to Congress that Congress originally would not
have had.
D argues that the statute should not apply here:
(1) The statute violates international law D is saying you cannot control me just because I am a US
jurisdiction.
COURT: US has the ability to prosecute US citizens who are abroad.
(2) The treaty is unconstitutional because it violates Cambodian law There, the age of consent is 15.
COURT: We are not regulating Cambodian people only US citizens.
HOLDING: CONVICTION UPHELD.
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When a state tries to prosecute a D who is a resident of that state but commits a crime in another state
SUBSTANTIAL EFFECT
Miller v. State GROUNDS FOR JURISDICTION OVER D WHO DID NOT COMMIT A CRIME IN THE
STATE
SUBSTANTIAL EFFECT NOT MET
FACTS: 2 robbers stole diamond rings in COLORADO.
They then went and met D in ARIZONA.
D then decided to help the robbers dispose of the rings in NEVADA.
D was caught in Utah and then extradited back to ARIZONA.
A.R.S. 13108 A. This state has jurisdiction over an offense that a person commits by his own conduct or the
conduct of another for which such person is legally accountable if:
2. The conduct outside this state constitutes an attempt or conspiracy to commit an offense within this state
and an act in furtherance of the attempt or conspiracy occurs within this state; or
4. The offense consists of an omission to perform a duty imposed by the law of this state regardless of the
location of the defendant at the time of the offense[.]
ISSUE: Does Arizona have jurisdiction to prosecute a crime that occurred in NEVADA?
HOLDING: NO.
REASONING: Arizonas 4 Theories of Why It Has Jurisdiction:
(1) Ds conduct produced a result in Arizona.
COURT: REJECTED Restatement: A state does NOT have jurisdiction to prescribe a rule of law
attaching legal consequences to conduct of an alien outside its territory merely on the ground that the
conduct affects one of its national.
MPC: A person may be convicted under the law of this State of an offense committed by his own
conduct or the conduct of another for which he is legally accountable if:
(a) either the conduct is an element of the offense or the result that is such an element occurs within
this State ...
ColumbaColell: In order for a state to prosecute D for a crime that occurred outside of its
territory, the crime must have had a SUBSTANTIAL EFFECT in that state.
The fact that someone in Colorado was deprived of their property lacks the requisite
substantial effect.
(2) D failed to perform a duty required under Arizona law.
COURT: REJECTED The same problem as the result theory.
Every state to which a theft victim travels would have jurisdiction over the thief.
(3) D was an accomplice to a crime committed in Arizona.
COURT: REJECTED ACCOMPLICE: One who knowingly and with criminal intent participates,
associates, or concurs with another in the commission of a crime.
All of Ds conduct occurred after the commission of the robbers crimes.
This would fall under a separate state/crime altogether.
(4) D was a conspirator to a crime committed in Arizona.
COURT: What Miller did is different from those situations where conspirators make specific preplanned efforts of escape, payment, concealment, or conversion of the fruits of the crime.
D did not make specific pre-planned efforts to aid the robbers in Colorado.
Instead, the robbers ended up running into D and then he aided them.
CONSTITUTIONAL PROBLEM: Is it a problem that D is going to be prosecuted for the crime of stealing goods
when the stealing occurred OUT-OF-STATE?
There may be an interest in regulating the stolen goods from outside the state, since non-regulation would
mean that conducting black-market dealings with goods stolen from out of state would occur in that state.
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DISSENT (Kazinsky): The fact that D was prosecuted by an Indian tribal court does mean that the tribe thought
that they were dealing with an Indian.
CHIN: The fact that Cruz was taken to jail (if you actually understand the way the court system works) does
NOT necessarily mean that they recognized D as an Indian.
PROBLEM: Concurrent jurisdiction means that sovereigns get their power from the same place.
This becomes a problem for double jeopardy purposes.
The Federal Government and an Indian court CANNOT have concurrent jurisdiction
They cannot prosecute the same person because of double jeopardy.
SUBJECT MATTER JURSIDICTION/JURISDICTION OVER PARTICULAR CRIMES
State prosecutions based on federal interests are not allowed
Exclusive federal interest = exclusive federal matter
However, states can still get to prosecute based on (exclusively) federally interests
States must:
a. Articulate a valid (legal) state interest
b. Not interfere with federal interests or authority
Ex. D gets convicted for federal perjury.
The state may still want to prosecute based on this federal breach since (for example) they want to
discourage perjury in state courts as well.
Ex. D was arrested for smoking weed.
The federal government can prosecute you for smoking weed.
People v. Ali Hassan STATE TRIES TO PROSECUTE A FEDERAL OFFENSE - PERJURY
FACTS: D is charged with violating 132 (STATE LAW) Every person who upon any trial, proceeding,
inquiry, or investigation whatever, authorized or permitted by law, offers in evidence, as genuine or true, any book,
paper, document, record, or other instrument in writing, knowing the same to have been forged or fraudulently
altered or ante-dated, is guilty of a felony.
ISSUE: The court is deciding whether providing documents in a federal proceeding can be used to prosecute in a
state court?
JURY found that he did put together false evidence in a federal investigation.
ELEMENT OF THE STATUTE IN DISPUTE: any trial, proceeding, inquiry, or investigation
whatever
Does this apply to FEDERAL LAW?
HOLDING: NO.
REASONING: People v. Kelly CA Supreme Court asked should we apply STATE LAW when a crime
happens in a FEDERAL PROCEEDING.
There, the court said that if there is ambiguity, we will NOT apply this statute to federal law.
Thomas v. Loney The interests involved with Ds crime was EXCLUSIVELY FEDERAL.
Courts of a state have no jurisdiction of a complaint for perjury in a contested election case involving a seat in
the Congress of the United States, although the false swearing was before a notary public of the state.
The power of punishing a witness for testifying falsely in a judicial proceeding belongs peculiarly
to the government in whose tribunals that proceeding is had.
People v. Cohen CONCURRENT JURISDICTION
FACTS: D was prosecuted for perjury in a state court when the alleged crime occurred in a federal proceeding.
ISSUE: Can a false oath given under a Federal proceeding be the basis of a STATE perjury conviction?
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HOLDING: YES if the federal proceeding is given by a self-regulating body that is NOT acting pursuant
exclusively to Federal law.
REASONING: The NASD is NOT an exclusively federal tribunal, nor was it acting solely pursuant to
federal law when it investigated defendants actions.
Rather, NASD is a self-regulatory body that protects both federal and state interests (it enforced
both federal AND state laws regarding securities exchange).
(1) VALID STATE INTEREST: The NASD enforced state laws.
(2) The fact that there if a federal law in place does NOT create a presumption that there
is a conflict between state and federal authority.
There can be no presumption that state authority is excluded from the mere fact that
Congress has legislated.
If a crime concerns ONLY federal interests, it will NOT confer state jurisdiction.
But, like in Cohen, if there is no interference with federal authorities and if there are also CONCURRENT STATE
INTERESTS, states may have jurisdiction.
One of the many ways that the Federal Government gets in state criminal proceedings is through the Hobbs
Act (18 U.S.C. 1951).
Another statute that some have suggested might be available: Civil Rights Statute (18 U.S.C. 241)
United States. Min Nan Wang FACTS: D broke into Mr. and Mrs. Tsais (owners of a restaurant) home, hit them
with both with hard objects with an accomplice, and stole money that Mrs. Tsai had taken from the restaurant.
D appeals his conviction for the violation of 18 U.S.C. 1951(robbery affecting interstate commerce) and
of using and carrying a firearm in relation to a crime of violence (robbery) in violation of 18 U.S.C. 924(c)
(1).
TEST: To support a conviction under the Hobbs Act, we have required the government to demonstrate nothing more
than a de minimis effect on interstate commerce.
But there still would have to be a plausibility of affecting interstate commerce.
The Hobbs Act gives such a LOW STANDARD.
Since the standard is so de minimus, robbing this amount of money may be enough.
However, they robbed private individuals.
The prosecution did not prove that the robbery substantially affected their business.
If the victim is an INDIVIDUAL, we are looking for something more substantial.
HOLDING:
LIMITS ON FEDERAL JURSIDICTION
Most federal prosecutions are justified based on the Commerce Clause.
However, criminal prosecution must show SUBSTANTIAL IMPACT.
It can show substantial impact by showing:
1. Large sums of money
2. Numerous victims
3. Ds action was motivated by victims ties to interstate commerce
4. Ds actions were against a business
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(4) Every law that changes the laws of evidence of a crime and reduces the requisite evidence or
CHANGES the admissible evidence to support a conviction.
Every law that alters the legal rules of evidence, and receives less, or different, testimony, than the
law required at the time of the commission of the offence, in order to convict the offender.
Hopt v. Utah WITNESS COMPETENCY: The new statute here enlarged the class of persons who could
testify against D and support a conviction (under the old rule, no felons could testify, but under the new rule,
they could).
Hopt changed merely the rules of evidence that was ADMISSABLE.
Thus, the new rule did NOT violate the Ex Post Facto Clause.
There is a difference between ADMISSABILITY of evidence and the SUFFICIENCY of the evidence.
Under the new statute here, there was a CHANGE IN THE ELEMENTS OF THE OFFENSE.
Hopt did not change the definition of the crime under the statute.
This new law, however, changed an ELEMENT of the offense.
Thus, it violated the Ex Post Facto Clause.
DUE PROCESS RETROACTIVITY
An unforeseeable judicial enlargement of a criminal statute, applied retroactively, violates the due process right to
fair warning of what constitutes criminal conduct
Consider the following factors
The existence and clarity of the state courts' previous interpretation
The explicit or implicit support of legislature
Harris v. Booker DUE PROCESS: PRECEDENCE: Bouie v. City of Columbia There, the USSC said that
retroactively apply unforeseeable interpretation of a criminal statute violates due process.
FACTS: D filed for habeas corpus, which was based on felony firearm rule.
Aiding and Abetting: Every person concerned in the commission of an offense, whether he directly commits
the act constituting the offense or procures, counsels, aids, or abets in its commission may hereafter be
prosecuted, indicted, tried and on conviction shall be punished as if he had directly committed such offense.
D robbed a store, but his companion wielded a shotgun.
ISSUE: Johnson OLD RULE: A person aids and abets only when they help to OBTAIN or RETAIN the
firearm.
NEW RULE: That carrying a gun in the duration of a felony was classifiable as aiding and abetting.
COURT: The new rule was UNFORESEEABLE because the statute had been followed for 20 years.
(1) The old ruling had been good law for 20 years.
(2) The Legislature would probably repeal the statute or amend it if they didnt like it, but they didnt.
This implies that the Legislature wanted the OLD RULE to stay.
DUE PROCES: VOID FOR VAGUENESS In the case where there is a law on the books where there is possible
liability and we can go to liability for D.
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Argument that what D did is NOT child pornography: Even if the child was fully naked in the picture, you would
have to consider every single photo of their child in a bathtub as lascivious.
CHIN: Probably not every naked picture of a child is child pornography.
Perhaps in the high school example, even if the photos were taken in a public place of people fully clothed could
potentially be prosecuted under this statute depending on how the photos were framed (Ex. Where they are zooming
onto).
State v. Adkins VAGUENESS
FACTS: D is charged with being in presence of other people using unlawful or controlled substances, knowing
full well that these substances were being used.
At trial, the defense counsel argued that this was constitutionally vague.
STATUTE: It is unlawful To visit or to be in any room, dwelling house, vehicle, or place where any controlled
substance is being used contrary to the provisions of section 28 if the person has knowledge that such activity is
occurring;
VAGUENESS: Is there a right to be in a place where a controlled substance is being used?
COURT: Must the host expel his guest when s/he knows that a controlled substance is being used?
The court suggests that this is unreasonable.
The court then gives examples of OTHER JURISDICTIONS where similar statutes were saved.
Ex. Another jurisdiction statute would say that you need to be in your house you control the substance,
and if we require that, then the statute is constitutional.
Ex. Another statute requires that you partake in the consumption as well.
The court HERE says that they dont want to rewrite the statute.
So they strike it down.
Herman v. The State 1850
COURT: struck down a statute that prohibited the use of drugs in Indiana.
They disagree with European ideals and authority In places with monarchs, where there is no
freedom, the government can do anything.
But in America, its not that people get freedom from the government, but that the government gets
its freedom from the people.
The court says that idea that the Legislature can criminalize anything that is considered to
be injurious cannot be taken literally.
In 1855, some courts thought that it was preposterous for the government to tell people what they can or cannot
consume.
HOLDING: The Liquor Act was struck down.
Herman v. State OVERTURNED BY
Territory v. Ah Lim 1890
At this point, the picture has CHANGED.
Opium is sold over the counter.
COURT: First the court says that laws are presumptively constitutional.
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Secondly, they say that it up to the legislatures job to keep the peoples interests in mind.
It is the judiciarys peculiar power to keep the legislature in line with the Constitution, but it does not
replace the legislature.
They admit that mistakes are going to be made, but it is more important that the government does what it
needs to do than the people find justice.
The court is basically saying that, if the government says that the people must take care of themselves, then that
is what it SHOULD be doing, so that that person is not a burden on the state.
NOTE: Today, do we have a constitutional right to alcohol and tobacco?
CHIN: Doesnt think so but isnt sure
- Things we used to think were criminal we now have a constitutional right
o Contraception
o Same sex relations
Constitutionally-protected things change.
(92.6% of Ds convicted in 1992 of crack cocaine violations were black and 4.7% of
defendants were white)
--Judicial/Police Discretion: typically is not a problem unless it is based on race/sex/etc.
--55 of 57 of Districts crack cocaine violators were black
**Outside Discussion/StudyScience facultys subtle gender biases favor male students**
--Male resumes rated higher on average than women resumes (even by female faculty)
**Extraneous factors in judicial decisions**
--Followed judges making parole decisions
--Straight-line correlation between how recently judges had eaten and how likely they were to grant parole
Percentage of favorable rulings drops gradually from 65% to nearly zero after each session, and rises again
after lunch breaks
Congress Justifications/Counterarguments:
--Concluded that crack cocaine was substantially more addictive and dangerous
--Dealers/kingpins more dangerous for this drug (really?...)
--Procedural deviations were not significant/egregious to make law unconstitutional
--Media bias/images did not substantially show that discrimination was involved in the drafting of the
legislations penalties
--Equal Protection Clause violated only if that impact can be traced to a discriminatory purpose
HOLDING: District Court finds legislature unconstitutional; sentences prison term consistent with power cocaine
levels instead of cocaine base levels.
In reversing, the Court of Appeals holds that the legislation was constitutional. The evidence present does not
PROVE the intent to discriminate requisite for an Equal Protection violation.
Clary presented only statistical evidence (oh yeah, thats not significant or anything) and offered nothing else to
show selective prosecution. What do they want, emails?
CHIN: It is obvious there is some discrimination in this practice, even if there is no concrete evidence of
discriminatory intent.
There is at least the possibility, but theres really not a
strong likelihood of a legal remedy in court.
Fair Sentencing Act (2010) Retroactively reduced sentences for crack cocaine; reduced disparity to 18-1
Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
In Re Winship (1970)Supreme Court: the Due Process Clause protects the accused against conviction
except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is
charged.
--Just because the case is closed doesnt mean there cant be a conviction
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SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE Could any rational trier of fact, viewing the evidence in the light most
favorable to the prosecution, have found every element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt?
The state no longer needs to disprove every possible innocent explanation in pure circumstantial evidence
cases.
Bobby L. Monroe v. State of Delaware FINGERPRINTS
FACTS: D claims he was window-shopping and that he and his GF were watching a movie during the night in
question (but, that movie was not in theaters on the date specified)
Appliance Center was burglarized through a broken window of a plexiglass door
Fingerprints of Monroe found on pieces of shattered plexiglass
Other fingerprints found but not identified/collectable
CHARGES: 1) Burglary Third Degree and Theft Felony
ISSUE: (1) Latent fingerprints of D on the outside door to a burglarized, commercial building is sufficient to convict
in the absence of any other evidence in the States case
(2) The failure of defendant to move for judgment of acquittal at the conclusion of the States case bars him
from raising sufficiency of evidence claims on appeal
Sufficiency of Evidence Claims:
--Page 90 cases show examples of when prints are (are NOT) sufficient evidence for conviction
A conviction cannot be sustained solely on a defendants fingerprints being found on an object at the crime scene
unless the State demonstrates that the prints could have been impressed only at the time the crime was committed.
This is followed by a number of jurisdictions
However, evidence may be sufficient where the circumstances create a strong inference that the defendant was the
perpetrator
a. Whether the prints were found in a private or public structure
b. Whether the D had any special access to the object in question
c. Whether the manner of placement of the prints on the object is supportive of the D having placed
them there while committing the offense
Waiver of Defendants Claims
Ds counsel did not file a timely appeal even though he was directed by his client
Were the defendants prints on any significant portion of the Plexiglas?
Evidence could not prove that he was there at the time of the robbery
BURDEN SHIFTING INSTRUCTIONS/ARGUMENTS: (1) The only way D can be acquitted is if the
prosecution witnesses are mistaken or lying.
Argument that this is objectionable: It creates a presumption that witnesses are telling the truth, and thus
shifts the burden to D to show that the witnesses are lying or mistaken.
(2) Scientific test shall be considered valid if done in accordance with regulations.
It is up to the jury to decide whether something like a chemical test is valid or reasonable.
In many parts of the trial, D needs to be able to show that such tests are invalid or unreasonable.
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SPECIAL SUFFICIENCY RULES: There is a general test: In making a decision, judges have to decide whether
there was proof beyond a reasonable doubt that undermines the presumption of innocence.
On review, the question is whether a reasonable finder of fact could have found that any one of the elements
has not been met.
REASONABLE DOUBT (SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE)
The standard of review for insufficiency of evidence claims is
whether any rational trier of fact, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the state, could
find a defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt
SUFFICIENCY OF FINGERPRINTS for CONVICTIONS
A conviction cannot be sustained solely on a defendant's fingerprints being found on an object at a crime
scene unless the state demonstrates that the prints could have been impressed only at the time the crime was
committed
Consider whether
a. The prints were found in a public or private structure
a. The object at issue is generally accessible or its access is restricted
b. D has special access to the item at issue, which may excuse the existence of his fingerprints
c. The manner of the placements of the prints is supportive of the contention that D placed them
there while committing the charged offense
SPECIAL SUFFICIENCY RULES
Some jurisdictions still prevent convictions based solely on accomplice testimony
Reason: If an accomplice is caught, he will probably falsely testify that his partner did it.
Corpus Delicti - Some jurisdictions (including California) prevent people from being convicted on a
confession alone - there needs to be corroborating evidence
Reason: A lot of crazy people claim that they did it.
Circumstantial Evidence Some jurisdictions hold that convictions based on circumstantial evidence alone
must exclude every reasonable hypothesis apart from guilt
This is a very hard standard to meet.
Weight of the Evidence (New Trial) - If the weight of the evidence goes against what the finder of fact
reaches, there will be a new trial ordered
Very few states allow this.
Corroboration - Certain states (and statutes - Ex. Treason) require certain corroboration
Ex. Treason Requires two witnesses to corroborate the evidence of treason.
But some jurisdictions have SPECIAL RULES:
ACCOMPLICE TESTIMONY: They say that
CORPUS DELICTI: A person cannot be convicted exclusively on their own uncorroborated statement that
someone else committed a crime (CA has this rule).
Ex. A woman says My baby didnt die of natural causes, but I smothered him.
The rule says that the confession alone is insufficient We need something else, such as
medical proof.
POLICY: People confess to crimes all the time that they didnt commit.
Ex. Thousands of people confessed to the Kennedy assassination.
If the gist of the crime is words alone, then a witness to the words can get over this doctrine.
But if there is no other corroboration to the words alone, it may not be enough under this
doctrine.
CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE: This is a totality of the circumstances rule.
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WEIGHT OF THE EIVDENCE NEW TRIAL This is where there is sufficient legal evidence, but the
state says that we are going to have a new trial anyway or dismiss the case.
This is when the court feels someone is innocent, despite a conviction by the jury.
This is very rare.
CORROBATION (Carmell) This is where the statute itself has its own special sufficiency rule,
PRESUMPTIONS
PROOF BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT: this is a standard used by judges in a bench trial, but this is
relevant to when judges and prosecutors make comments that undermine the presumption of innocence and
burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
The evidence has to become sufficient to satisfy EVERY ELEMENT OF THE OFFENSE.
Then the question is what are the elements of the offense?
Ex. Connecticut General Statutes No person shall carry any pistol or revolver upon his or her person, except
when such person is within the dwelling house or place of business of such person, without a permit to carry the
same issued as provided.
ISSUE: except part Is this an element of the offense (which, in general, would put the burden on the
prosecution) or an affirmative offense (in which case, D would have the burden to supply the evidence)?
AFFIRMATIVE DEFENSES: D must bear burden of going forward, BURDEN OF
PRODUCTION some evidence.
This is enough to get to the jury.
Thus D would prefer it to be an ELEMENT rather than an AFFIRMATIVE DEFENSE, because
in which case, they dont have to supply any evidence.
Why would a defense witness NOT want to testify:
The witness could have some criminal convictions, and this could come up.
The witness could have accidentally confess to another element of the offense.
The witness could get impeached for prior inconsistent statements.
AFFIRMATIVE DEFENSES
Affirmative defenses are NOT an element of the crime
It should never be an element of the crime.
Affirmative defenses allows D to be found not guilty even if elements are proved
D has the burden of production and persuasion, which varies by jurisdiction
Creating a reasonable doubt Some jurisdictions just require that D only make a reasonable doubt
with evidence supporting the affirmative defense.
Once D is done, the prosecution must rebut and prove the element beyond a reasonable doubt
When can an Affirmative Defense Exist?
2 distinct standards:
1. CA Rule of Convenience and Necessity
D may have to prove the fact if
It is not unduly harsh or unfair for him to do so
Its existence is peculiarly within his personal knowledge
It would be relatively difficult or inconvenient for the prosecution to prove its non-existence
Ex. If D has a permit (and having a gun permit is an affirmative defense to a charge of
carrying a firearm), it would be a lot more difficult for the prosecutor to prove that D
does not have a permit than for D to come forth with the permit.
2. Florida (Majority) Rule
Legislature has a general ability to change an element into an affirmative defense
Exception when it would be patently unreasonable to do so
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PRESUMPTIONS
4 types of presumptions
A permissive presumption (regarding the existence of an element) based on specified facts
Constitutional
Mandatory (burden of production) presumption
Burden of production If the prosecution provides clear and convincing evidence that D was
in the car, but this can be rebutted by D by showing some evidence.
This is less than 50% sure.
???
Mandatory (burden of persuasion) presumption
Unconstitutional It shifts the burden of proof to D to prove that he didnt satisfy an element,
when this would usually be the prosecutions job.
ISSUE: 278.5 does not say whether or not it is an element of an offense or an affirmative defense, nor does it say
who has the burden nor what the burden is.
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REASONING: Rather than punishing inaction, to convict under 893.13, the state must prove that the D
engaged in the affirmative act of selling manufacturing, delivering, or possessing a controlled substance.
There is no protected right to be ignorant of the nature of the property in ones possession.
Common sense tells us that those who traffic in heroin will inevitably become aware that the
product they deal in is smuggled, unless they practice a studied ignorance to which they are not
entitled.
CONCURRENCE: The concurrence suggests a case-by-case defense: it would be difficult to uphold the act,
which codifies felony offenses with substantial penalties, against a constitutional attack when mounted by a person
who possessed a controlled substance unwittingly or without knowledge of its illicit nature.
CHIN: This doesnt really work because we already have the affirmative defense.
NOTE: Mens rea is rarely constitutionally required.
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QUESTION: How consequential is the decision?
Even if we had BOTH requirements that we know that we possess something and that we know that that
substance is an illicit substance, how much will it affect outcomes?
ANSWER: JURY PRESUMPTION If a person says that we didnt know that we the suitcase in
my car contained drugs, a jury may presume that, since the suitcase was in my car, I must have
known about the drugs.
Neidinger There is language in Neidinger that suggests that CA law does not agree with the decision in that
Adkins.
There are, of course, limits on what the state may do in this regard. [T]he state may not label as an
affirmative defense a traditional element of an offense and thereby make a defendant presumptively guilty
of that offense unless the defendant disproves the existence of that element.
TRADITIONAL ELEMENT of the statute: Knowledge of the illicit nature of the substance.
Therefore, it is not right to make that into an affirmative defense and thereby shift the
burden to D to prove its nonexistence.
(3) CONCLUSIVE PRESUMPTION JURY INSTRUCTIONS: Ex. IF the prosecution successfully proves that
you possessed something, then the jury HAS to presume the elemental fact.
Conclusive presumptions are IRREBUTTABLE.
Burden on Defense: Irrelevant Once the presumption is met, it sticks.
CONSTITUTIONALITY NO.
(4) BURDEN SHIFTING PRESUMPTION D has the burden of production and proving that the presumption is
wrong.
CONSTITUTIONALITY (1) If it is an element that D has to disprove, then it is NOT constitutional.
(2) If D has the burden to prove the inexistence or falseness of an element via a DEFENSE or an
EXCEPTION, then it IS constitutional.
TEST: The ultimate test of any devices constitutional validity in a given case remains constant: the device must not
undermine the factfinders responsibility at trial, based on evidence adduced by the State, to find the ultimate
facts beyond a reasonable doubt.
LEARY TEST: The predicate facts that supposed to lead to the elementary conclusion does not
correspond.
MAJORITY: The court does not look at the test NOT in the abstract.
They say that maybe this presumption makes sense ACCORDING TO THE FACTS OF THE THIS CASE, and
thus, it may not be very problematic to make such a presumption since the girl was the least likely to be in
possession of the gun.
DISSENT: They want to look at the test in the abstract.
They say that just because you jump into the car, it doesnt necessarily mean that you possessed
the gun.
People v. Nix FAILED LEARY TEST
FACTS: Gun was found in Ds trunk.
NYC Admin. Code 10-303: It shall be unlawful for any person to have in his or her possession a rifle or shotgun
unless said person is the holder of a permit for the possession and purchase of rifles and shotguns.
PRESUMPTION: If the gun is inside of a persons car, that gun must be in his or her possession.
ISSUE: This time, the gun was in the TRUNK (and thus there was no clear view), and thus there was an
issue of whether or not D actually had any control or even knew about the gun.
Also, the statute made the holding of a PERMIT to be an ELEMENT, not a defense or exception.
HOLDING: This was unconstitutional because there was not enough evidence to support the logic of the
presumption.
The presumption was ILLOGICAL since, even though D was present in the car, since the gunw as in the
TRUNK rather than in plain view, it makes no sense that D must have known or had control (i.e.
possessed) the gun.
In other words, the presumption that the statute created failed the Leary Test.
Conley v. United States FACTS: D was in a vehicle with an illegally obtained firearm on the front console and D
was in the backseat.
PMVCF STATUTE:
(a) It is unlawful for a person to be voluntarily in a motor vehicle if that person knows that a firearm is in the vehicle,
unless the firearm is being lawfully carried or lawfully transported.
(b) It shall be an affirmative defense to this offense, which the defendant must prove by a preponderance of
the evidence, that the defendant, upon learning that a firearm was in the vehicle, had the specific intent to
immediately leave the vehicle, but did not have a reasonable opportunity under the circumstances to do
so.
ELEMENTS: (1) They must be in a vehicle, (2) they must know that a firearm is in a vehicle, and (3) they must
remain in the vehicle (4) and they must be voluntarily be in the vehicle.
ISSUE: D argues that this statute violates Due Process by shifting the burden to D because Ds voluntary
presence in the vehicle is an ELEMENT of the statute, but according to the affirmative defense, the D must show
that it wasnt voluntary.
PROSECUTION: Must prove that there was no opportunity to get out, reasonable or not.
DEFENSE: They must prove that it was not reasonable to get out under the circumstances.
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However, it is implausible for D to try to prove that it was unreasonable, since any presence inside
of the car would be construed as voluntary.
MAJORITY: 2 PROBLEMS WITH THE STATUTE: (1) The burden shifting is unlawful.
A statute cannot make an affirmative defense out of an element, since that would shift the burden to D.
(2) The statute places a high and unusual duty on D.
o Lambert A big USSC case where the court stated that a statute was unconstitutional because it
criminalized remaining in LA for a certain period of time without registering if you are a felon.
o INQUIRY NOTICE: Nobody could ever think that they (as a felon) would have such a duty.
o MAJORITY: The duty to get out of the car if you see a gun in the car is a highly unusual and
unforeseeable.
Here, the majority believes that it is a federally constitutional right to knowingly ride around
with a firearm that is illegally obtained.
REASONING: There are a lot of lawful guns D.C.
o Thus, there is no way a person should be put on alert when they see a gun.
CONCURRENCE: Focuses on the AFFIRMATIVE DEFENSE.
He gets around the objections of the majority by saying that if they have an opportunity to get out of the car to
mean that the burden on D is fairly light compared to the burden of the prosecution since all they have to prove is
that they had no reasonable opportunity to get out.
Thus, he argues that the burden on D and on the prosecution is the EQUIVALENT, at least in some
circumstances.
HYPO: If an elderly woman gets in a car with an illegal firearm outside, but the bus stop is a mile
away The prosecution needs to prove that she voluntarily remained in the vehicle but all the
defense needs to prove is that it was unreasonable to get out of the vehicle because she had no
reasonable opportunity to get out.
Ulster v. Allen This USSC court case suggests that maybe it IS dangerous (legally) to be in a car with an
unregistered gun, and that it is not unreasonable for the law to place restriction on people to be in the presence
of a gun.
CHIN: How to harmonize Allen with Conley:
NOTICE: Maybe Allen states very clearly that you should be on notice when you get into a car with a
firearm.
However, maybe this is a critique of Allen.
State v. Taylor PERMISSIVE INFERENCE NOT CONSTITUTIONAL
FACTS: D was convicted of murder.
As we the trial approaches, a witness is dragged to court and THREATENED BY D.
PROSECUTION: They want to use the fact that D threatened the witness as a presumption of guilt.
REASONING: People wouldnt want to tamper with evidence or try to destroy it if they werent
guilty.
CHIN: Even if I am being prosecuted for a crime which I didnt commit, I may be equally motivated
to tamper with the evidence.
Thus the jury is given a conscious guilt instruction This creates a PERMISSIVE INFERENCE.
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INSTRUCTION: The instruction must specifically include a statement explaining to the jury that it may regard the
basic facts as sufficient evidence of the inferred fact, but that it is not required to do so.
ISSUE: Should there be such a presumption of guilt?
HOLDING: This is a burden-shifting instruction.
REASONING: It is the prosecutions job to provide the jury with the witness, and it is the jury (factfinders) job to rule on whether or not to consider the witness testimony as true and valid.
Stating that the jury may presume the truth and validity of the threatenend witness testimony shifts
the burden to D to disprove the truth and validity.
QUESTION Are presumptions legitimate?
CHIN: This is a pro-prosecution mechanism that Due Process says that it doesnt apply (People v. Nix) or
where the presumption is irrelevant (Ulster v. Allen).
However, it does seem to be upheld in CLOSE CASES, where the conviction or acquittal could go
either way. We can GENERALIZE presumption in that, where we have a logical connection
between the predicate fact and the elemental fact, then it may be upheld.
Another way to do it would be to give things favorable to the defense in presumption form.
(Ex. If you find it to be reasonable under the circumstances, the jury may presume a
prosecutions witness to be unreliable or lying if they feel it is so.)
STATUTORY INTERPRETATION
2 BASIC APPROACHES TO STATUTORY INTERPRETATION:
(1) TEXTUALISM APPROACH: look at the words, define them
This is designed to limit the power of judges and puts more powers on the Legislature.
Here, there will be reluctance to go beyond the text except for what people commonly believe
certain words to mean (i.e. the usage of dictionaries).
This doesnt like legislative history.
NOTE: Legislative history Things like committee reports usually dont come about until after Congress
passes the law.
Thus, legislative history can be a rather retroactive discussion.
Also, until recently, the national Congressional record was never actually said on the floor of
Congress.
Instead, they usually write speeches, but dont have enough time to say it.
Now, after the REFORM, they just have to read the first sentence.
CHIN: This is still not really evidence of Congressional intent.
Scalia says NO to intentionalism.
Other justices like Breyer agree that unambiguous text must be interpreted by its own meaning.
However, these justices are more willing to go beyond the text.
PLAIN MEANING RULE Both sides agree that unambiguous statutes must generally be interpreted by
their own meaning.
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ENTRAPMENT
2 VIEWS:
1. SUBJECTIVE Majority View
i. Did the government induce the crime?
a. Must be a Yes
ii. Was D predisposed to committing the crime?
a. Must be a No
b. QUESTION: Did the government come up with the idea and try to punish an innocent
person who was otherwise not predisposed to illegal activity.
i. This is a jury question.
2. Objective Version Minority View
i. Did the govt use a method that would make ordinary law abiding people commit a crime
Substantial risk test Did the governments conduct create a substantial risk of D
committing the crime?
This works as an affirmative offense for really any offense.
Sorrells v. United States ENTRAPMENT
FACTS: D was indicted for a half-gallon of whiskey to an undercover agent.
D tried to use ENTRAPMENT as a defense.
TRIAL COURT DENIED.
The undercover agent asked D three times if he could get some liquor.
After he provided the liquor, he was prosecuted under the
WITNESSES: testified of Ds good character.
CHIN: There is a traditional defense of GOOD CHARACTER This will take the form of defense
bringing in witnesses to say that D is actually a good person.
The jury is allowed to consider whether the persons good character creates a reasonable doubt.
PROBLEM: Once the fact that the persons good character is an issue, the probability of his
bad character also becomes fair game.
ISSUE: Is entrapment a defense, even though the statute doesnt mention it.
ACTUS REA and MENS REA seems to be both satisfied.
DEFENSE: The undercover cop essentially coerced him
USSC: Entrapment should be a defense in this case.
HOLDING: They REMANDED it back to the District Court to consider it.
This is a JURY QUESTION.
TEST: It is fair game to consider whether D was otherwise innocent, and the defense may be brought
up in the not guilty plea.
CONTROLLING QUESTION: D was a person otherwise innocent whom the government is seeking to punish for
an alleged offense which is the product of the creative activity of its own officials.
When the criminal design originates, not with the accused, but is conceived in the mind of the government
officers, and the accused is by
1. persuasion,
2. deceitful representation, OR
3. inducement
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lured into the commission of a criminal act, the government is estopped by sound public policy from
prosecution therefor.
TEST: (1) When the government induces D into committing the alleged crime via persuasion or (effectually)
coercion.
(2) (Sort of the same question) Whether D was predisposed to the crime.
The government thinks that there could not really be inducement without predisposition.
MAJORITY They get here via statutory interpretation.
They say that Congress couldnt have logically said that this exception DOESNT apply here.
Thus, there is the exception/defense of entrapment.
The cases that are cited are ones unlike where a narc sends drugs to someone and then waits to see whether or
not D takes them.
NOTE: Here, the legislature did not dissent to this reading of their statute at all.
CONCURRENCE Justice Roberts has different thinking of how to get to the conclusion.
He thinks (Scalias textualism) that you cannot read into the statute an exception THAT WASNT
ALREADY THERE.
He believes that courts cannot rewrite the statute.
CHIN: DISAGREES There is no way around courts rewriting statutes.
It makes no sense to believe that individual statutes are completely divorced from surrounding
legal principles.
Thus, in the case of incomplete codes (Ex. US Code) which do not read in things like selfdefense, courts should read in such a defense.
Elsewise, we assume that Congress did not know of such exceptions.
Nevertheless, he believes that D should get off the hook according to Roberts.
How far does entrapment go?
What if the cops really induced D to commit murder?
NOTE: For certain things, no matter how much emotional pressure you are put to you would never do it.
Thus, predisposition must be looked at through circumstantial evidence.
MISTAKE
Mistake of Law
An individual who breaks a law based on a reasonable reliance on the interpretation of a law through
an established modem is not guilty of violating the law
Attorney General If D relies on the AGs interpretation of the law, and then commits an
offense, D is not guilty.
Army Corp of Engineers
Local law professor Not OK.
Listening to Chin misstate the law cannot alleviate Ds culpability.
X-Citement Video 18 U.S.C. 2252 (a) Any person who
(1) knowingly transports or ships in interstate or foreign commerce by any means including by computer or mails,
any visual depiction, if
(A) the producing of such visual depiction involves the use of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct; and
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Actus Reas: For the completed crime of murder/manslaughter, there must be some act/omission that caused
death.
FELONY MURDER: A killing that took place in the commission of a felony.
This doctrine bolts onto other criminal law doctrines like aiding and abetting and conspiracy to commit a
felony.
Ex. D is facing murder charges by lending his car to his friends, who used that car to rob a store, and
in the commission of their robbery, they killed somebody.
Mens rea D knew that they were going to use it for a crime.
D will probably still be guilty of felony murder.
CHIN Most states will probably require actual knowledge rather than
reasonable/constructive knowledge (i.e. D should have known that that the car would
be used in a robbery).
DISTINCTION BETWEEN FIRST AND SECOND DEGREE MURDER:
Generally, first degree murder is premeditated.
M.P.C. DIFFERENT LEVELS (From highest to lowest):
1. Purposely (you are consciously trying to kill someone) OR knowingly (substantial certainty) Murder
a. Purposely You put poison into Tylenol.
b. Knowingly You counterfeit Tylenol with different substances probably knowingly.
2. Reckless with Extreme Indifference to Human Life Murder
a. Certain felonies raise a presumption of reckless with extreme indifference to human life (permissive
inference).
3. Extreme Emotional Disturbance OR Recklessness Manslaughter
a. Reckless Conscious disregard for the substantial and unjustifiable risk.
i. This is a conscious disregard of an unjustifiable risk.
ii. Twitchell Think not about just the magnitude of the risk, but also the
purpose of assuming that risk.
iii. Risks that have a higher degree of social utility will probably not be
considered as reckless.
iv. This is why a risky surgery will probably not be considered reckless,
as opposed to an illegal car race.
v. What is reckless JURY.
b. Extreme Emotion Disturbance MPCs equivalent to heat of passion.
4. Negligently Negligent Homicide.
a. You should know of the unjustifiable risk, but you dont know.
i. For both Recklessness and Negligence, D is deviating from a
standard of care.
EXAM QUESTION What type of MPCs type of murder is established by civil negligence?
ANSWER: NONE.
State v. Hinckle UNCONSCIOUSNESS NO ACTUS REAS
CHARGE/FORM OF HOMICIDE: INVOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER.
ELEMENTS OF INVOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER:
They have a form of unlawful act manslaughter You are guilty of involuntary manslaughter if you
do something unlawful.
FACTS: D drove after having been drinking and crossing a centerline and crashed and killed
someone.
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NOTE: In some jurisdictions, doing something like crossing a centerline can be a basis for a low-level unlawful act
involuntary manslaughter.
What other forms of homicide could D have been charged with?
D did not have an intent to kill.
Recklessness D got into the car after having consumed alcohol.
Unlawful Act D crossed the dividing line.
ISSUE: D had a brain condition could have caused Ds loss of consciousness, which in turn could have caused D to
cross the centerline.
JURY INSTRUCTION Did not include unconsciousness doctrine.
COURT: Unconsciousness is traditionally treated as a kind of insanity.
They do not want a kind of insanity because it could lead to institutionalization.
However, if D is able to prove unconsciousness, they destroy one of the elements of the offense actus reas.
BURDEN OF PROOF: Once D comes forth with any evidence of unconsciousness, the prosecution
must prove, not only all of the elements of the offense, but must prove that D fulfilled all of those
elements beyond a reasonable doubt while conscious.
HOLDING: REVERSED AND REMANDED. This is improper jury instruction.
The court said that the jury was given to lenient an instruction.
Instruction If the person knew or should have known of the threat of unconsciousness, then D is
criminally liable.
The should have known part is not a basis for liability.
OMISSION DUTY TO ACT
These are generally NOT the same as acts unless one of these conditions is present:
1. A statutory duty to act
2. A statutory relationship (Ex. Parent/child, teacher/student).
a. These relationships usually prescribe a duty to act.
3. Contract (Ex. Nurse/patient)
4. Risk creation (car accident)
5. Voluntary assumption of care Once you start to help, you have to take reasonable steps to follow
through on the theory that your voluntary conduct might have dissuaded other volunteers.
a. Ex. There is a accident by the road. D pulls over and starts to help, but then stops.
DISTINCTION:
Ex. If A wants to kill B, and C gives A a gun, that is aiding and abetting.
Ex. If A wants to kill B, but C says that they dont want to get involved.
Commonwealth v. Twitchell HOMICIDE BY OMISSION
CONVICTION Involuntary manslaughter.
FACTS: Parents practiced Christian Science, and did not seek traditional medical attention for their child.
Evidence showed that the child would have been saved had regular medical attention been sought.
FORM OF HOMICIDE: Wanton and reckless conduct.
No intent to kill is required, but the activity is wanton and reckless to preserving human life.
STATUTE: A child shall not be deemed to be neglected or lack proper physical care for the sole reason that he is
being provided remedial treatment by spiritual means alone in accordance with the tenets and practice of a
recognized church or religious denomination by a duly accredited practitioner thereof.
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Arguments that D had no duty: CAUSATION It is not clear that even if D did what he was supposed to that that
would have prevented the victims death.
OMISSION of a DUTY TO ACT: Different things can establish a duty of care:
(1) Statutes
(2) Status relationship (parent/child)
(3) Contract (nurse)
(4) Risk creation (car accident)
(5) Voluntary assumption of care
PROSECUTION: They could have based their duty of care on voluntary assumption of care.
D brought the mother and child into the house.
When Walter White went into the house where Jesse and his girlfriend were shooting up heroine,
backed off when he saw her OD, that was fine.
Rather, if Walter invited them, and saw that she was dying in his guest room, that would be a
problem.
PREMEDIATED AND DELIBERATE
Question: What is premeditated and deliberated as opposed to intentional murder.
State v. Guthrie SUFFICIENCY
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN PREMEDITATE, DELIBERATED, and INTENTIONAL
FACTS: D was being harassed (hit with a towel repeatedly), ignored it at first, but then turned around and stabbed
the victim in the neck.
The victim died later.
COURT: The court goes through the question of sufficiency of the evidence.
ISSUE: Was there enough evidence that this murder was deliberate and premeditated?
ANSWER: They are pretty deferential to jury verdicts.
A conviction is a rejection of a self-defense defense.
The jury must have rejected self-defense (one mitigation defense It mitigates murder to
manslaughter).
The jury must have found no provocation (and mitigation to manslaughter).
o D might have rationalized that he had been provoked and responded to nondeadly force
with deadly force the jury must have rejected this.
NOTE: According to Sandstrom, the jury is not allowed to presume that D intended to kill the victim.
But they are allowed to infer that D intended this based on the fact that he stabbed the victim in the
neck.
The jury must have also found that attack intentional.
The jury also must have found premeditation.
STANDARD OF REVIEW (Appellate court looking at a sufficiency of the evidence case):
Taking the facts in the light most avorable to the prosecution, including all credibility deteriminations and inferences
of fact, could any reasonable jury have found every element of the offense?
Ds rarely win on appeal when challenging a jury verdict.
The jury verdict is very important.
This is why the jury instruction is so important.
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We have a number of factors, but then the court says that any amount of time could do.
Ex. If the prosecution could prove that D formed the intent, and automatically stand up and then
committed the fatal act, this would satisfy the time requirement BUT not any of the others.
ROLE OF ALCOHOL or DRUGS in Eliminating Mental State
Reckless driving
o D cannot claim that s/he cannot be convicted for reckless driving because they were drinking.
o REASONS: (1) The act of getting into a car while drunk satisfies actus reas, and (2) public policy.
Assault
Premeditation
o I didnt plan to kill since I was high.
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This is a part of the MERGER DOCTRINE This is will limit the list of predicate felonies to prevent felonies that
are too close to murder already.
Assault is usually one of these felonies is assault (although Armstrong disagrees)
(2) ANOTHER LIMITATION INHERENTLY DANGEROUS LIMITATION This is the opposite of merger
doctrine.
These will limit the predicate felonies from adding in felonies that are too far away to murder/homicide in
the first place.
State v. Anderson INHERENTLY DANGEROUS LIMITATION
This looks to the HISTORY of Felony Murder doctrine.
HISTORY: This doctrine arose when there were fewer felonies, and most of those felonies were punishable
by death anyway.
However, attempts for most of those felonies was NOT punishable by death.
The felony murder doctrine came about to prosecute those who did not complete these felonies, but
someone ended up getting killed anyway.
COURT: There are a lot of new felonies and not all of them are as dangerous.
TESTS:
1. Facts of the case
2. Elements of the offense
3. Or both.
States are split on whether a court should look just to the elements of an offense, or the circumstances of the
commission of the offense to determine whether the felony is inherently dangerous.
PROBLEM OF ADVERSE SELECTION - Looking only at the circumstances of a particular case-i.e. the
facts-would eviscerate the special danger to human life standard because the predicate offense would always
be found to have been committed in a particularly dangerous manner if a death occurs.
Ex. If felony murder is attached to identity theft case in which someone happened to die, if you just
look at the facts, the prosecution could always say that this nondangerous act was applied in a
dangerous way.
Thus, we must try to look at it in the abstract.
What if we just look at the facts and not in the abstract then?
PROBLEM Well, you could say that just about any crime could be committed in a non-dangerous way.
NOTE: M.P.C. basically got rid of felony-murder.
For many jurisdictions, in the felony murder doctrine, courts will NOT read the statute literally if the statute says
any felony.
Instead, it is going to have to be a dangerous felony.
But this also go into merger doctrine.
MERGER DOCTRINE We have a carefully constructed mens rea system and
NOTE: Between these two limitations, we have the potential to dramatically narrow the list of predicate felonies.
State v. Contreras CAN BURGLARY WITH INTENT TO COMMIT ASSAULT BE A PREDICATE
OFFENSE?
CHIN: Burglary, along with robbery, are the classic felony murder predicates.
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In Williams Then they added another requirement that the killing has to have been in furtherance or had to have
moved the felony along.
Then the Legislature changed the statute.
NEW STATUTE: a person is guilty of murder in the first degree when:
While engaged in the commission of, or attempt to commit, or flight after committing or attempting to
commit any felony, the person recklessly causes the death of another person.
ISSUE: Did the new statute overall Williams only, or did it overrule Williams and Wieck together?
COURT: Just Williams.
Both the old and the new statutes uses the word causes.
Looking at the Legislative history, it seems that it doesnt seem that they wanted to rule out agency theory.
They continue to apply the agency theory.
HOLDING: Since neither D nor the co-felon did the killing, a first-degree murder cannot be sustained.
However, a lesser crime manslaughter may be sustained.
REMEDY: So either, conviction of the lesser crime can be accepted or they can remand it for a new trial.
CHIN: D may be prejudiced by this remedy since, although D cannot be convicted of felony-murder, the elements of
manslaughter was found by a jury.
PROSECUTION ARGUMENT: The jury found the elements of manslaughter.
DEFENSE ARGUMENT: The defense could not bring it up and deliberate.
Also, there may be another crime at play here depraved heart murder or extreme recklessness.
Clearly, this was extremely reckless conduct.
Even if there is no agency, isnt it extremely reckless behavior that resulted in the cops death.
However, they cannot convict for extreme recklessness because they were never charged with it in the first place.
PREDICATE FELONY The underlying felony (shooting) seems to be assault.
This could be a merger doctrine problem.
NOTE: This Delaware is NOT classic felony murder because of the word recklessly This implies that the result
has to be somewhat foreseeable.
DEFENSE: There going to be an argument that this result was not foreseeable.
DEFENSES
INSANITY DEFENSE TESTS:
I. M'Naghten Test (Once, majority rule, then, minority rule, majority rule again):
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a. Ex. The victim and felon alone in the woods. The victim says that they are going to go get a gun from
the car. This is NOT an imminent attack. Thus, D cannot kill the attacker.
i. REASONING: The victim may change their mind. D must wait until the threat is
unambiguous.
4. Necessary There can be no other reasonable alternatives. If there are other alternatives (Ex. You have a
taser), then
a. In most jurisdictions, you dont have to retreat. This is because, in most circumstances, the threat is
somewhat imminent (i.e. the attacker is not on a plane from Cleveland to come and kill you).
b. Even in jurisdictions that do require jurisdictions have a castle jurisdiction This says that you have
to retreat unless you are in your home or (sometimes) your office unless the attacker has a right to be
there (then you probably have to retreat).
5. Unlawful Force The force cannot come from authorities victims (i.e. you cannot claim self-defense for
shooting a cop).
M.P.C. SELF-DEFENSE
1. Honest Belief Just an actual belief that you are facing force. This does not have to be a reasonable belief.
a. POLICY It is unjustifiable for D to be able to assert that he honestly believed he was facing force if
D was just sitting around.
b. BUT MPC 3.09 says that if the belief is reckless or negligence, D can be convicted of reckless or
negligent crimes.
i. Thus, they have self-defense to murder, but not to other crimes.
2. Deadly Force However, this includes danger of death, serious bodily injury, kidnapping or rape.
3. Immediately Necessary The attack does NOT have to be imminent.
a. Thus, under the MPC, D can commit preemptive murder and claim self-defense.
4. Unlawful Deadly Force The other side must be using unlawful force.
5. You must retreat before using deadly force if you know you can do so with complete safety.
PROVOCATION
You cannot claim self-defense if you were the provoker.
However, the provocation claim is LIMITED:
An unlawful assault
BUT, for both MPC and CA, if a jury is convinced that the victim, by insulting him, was trying to
provoke or incite such behavior, then self-defense works.
OR
CA 3472 contrived. Nonthreatening words alone shouldnt be provocation.
Non-Deadly Aggressor, and the Victim Responds with Deadly Force
COMMON LAW:
SEVERAL APPROACHES.
SITUATION 1: V provokes A with nondeadly force and A kills V.
SITUATION 2: V provokes A with nondeadly force, A responds by trying to kill V, and V (now faced with deadly
force) kills A.
SPLIT in Jurisdictions:
1. Some Jurisdictions The result is manslaughter.
a. REASONING: If V provokes A with nondeadly force and A kills V, then A was partially justified
because he was provoked.
b. If V kills A (Situation 2), V was faced with deadly force.
2. Other Jurisdictions Murder. Killing was not justified in either situation.
3. Other Jurisdictions In SITUATION 1 (A kills V) there is no homicide crime, assault only.
a. REASONING:
b. Why doesnt this work for V kills A?
MPC: 3.04(2)(b)(1) Again, this goes back to whether the provocation was for the purpose of killing or causing
serious bodily injury.
Gibbs v. Florida VERBAL PROVOCATION
FACTS: Black lady says hello, then racist white lady gets all crazy then dies from the stress of the incident.
HEAT OF PASSION/PROVOCATION
What if someone asserts self-defense by saying that his killing was because he was provoked and was in the heat
of the moment.
COMMON LAW
Mere words are not enough Insults do not work.
Must be sudden The emotion must be obtained immediately after the provocation.
obscure the reason of an ordinary man.
Traditional list of provocation that is considered adequate: assault, sudden discovery of adultery,
illegal arrest, homosexual proposition.
This list says that, while the killing is not necessarily understandable, the heat of passion (the
emotion) is understandable.
This list is pretty must gone.
MODERN VIEW: jury question.
M.P.C. In the M.P.C., murder is mitigated to manslaughter.
Mere words ARE enough
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STAND YOUR GROUND: Some states require retreat except in home or work
The other side must be using unlawful force
No shooting a cop
D used no more force than necessary to defend against the danger
May use non-deadly force against deadly force or non-deadly force
May use deadly force against deadly force or force that will cause great bodily harm
MPC: 1.01-1.13
2.01-2.13
3.01-3.11
4.01-4.10
5.01-5.07
2.10.0-2.10.6
2.11.0-2.11.3
2.12.0-2.12.5
2.13.0-2.13.6
220.1-220.3
221.0-221.2
222.1
223.0-223.9
A state cannot simply say that the federal it illegal for an officer to speak disrespectfully about the President, and
therefore we can prosecute in Yolo county.
This does not work.
The federal crime can come into the state in certain OTHER ways:
Ex. Sentencing in state court. Someone has been convicted of committing a crime under Federal law.
They may not be able to prosecute that crime, but in later convictions, the state can take the previous federal
violation/conviction into consideration.
If the state doesnt have power to prosecute for it directly, it probably cannot prosecute for related offenses.
If the Federal government owns the property, it very well could be exclusive Federal jurisdiction.
Assimilative Crimes Act The Assimilative Crimes Act, 18 U.S.C. 13, makes state law applicable to conduct
occurring on lands reserved or acquired by the Federal government as provided in 18 U.S.C. 7(3), when the act or
omission is not made punishable by an enactment of Congress.
National Parks Jurisdiction (state or Federal) would depend on whether or not the Congress accepted the land and
the US bought it (Ingram).
BURDEN SHIFTING STATUTES:
Ex. pistol without a license
FIRST: Ask is this an element or a defense.
(1) If it is an element, then the prosecution has the burden of production and persuasion.
Then D has the burden of production (rebutting the presumption).
Then the state can also rebut with a burden of persuasion.
SECOND: If it is a defense, then the state has no burden (D has to bring it up).
Here, D has the burden of production and persuasion.
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