Page 41 Flashcards

0
Q

What are the common law elements of duress?

A
  • immediate
  • threat of death/GBI
  • against defendant or others
  • creating fear that would make an ordinary person YIELD
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1
Q

What are the common and modern law views on murder as a result of duress?

A
  • CL: doesn’t excuse intentional killings
  • MPC/modern: if a reasonable person would’ve killed someone else to avoid his own death, duress can mitigate murder to voluntary manslaughter
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2
Q

What are the two things that are not allowed for common-law duress?

A
  • defendant cannot have put himself in this situation

- D can’t kill another

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3
Q

What are the MPC elements of duress?

A
  • threat of unlawful force
  • against defendant or any person
  • that would make a person of reasonable firmness in D’s situation yield
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4
Q

What are the different rules for MPC duress ?

A
  • D can’t have recklessly put himself in the situation
  • Duress can apply to any crime, even homicide
  • D must take any reasonable opportunity to escape
  • must terminate his conduct as soon as the duress is over
  • no defense for carrying out superior’s orders
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5
Q

What are two ways that expert testimony can be used for battered woman syndrome to help with a defense of duress?

A
  • to show D had an honest belief that she was being immediately threatened
  • to show D wasn’t reckless just because she stayed in the abusive relationship
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6
Q

What was the old common-law about coercion of a wife by her husband?

A

A married woman wasn’t liable for her crimes if she acted under the coercion of her husband (not true today)

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7
Q

If you commit a crime by coercion, but you’re not excused under duress, what can you ask for?

A

Your punishment to be lower than it would’ve been if there were no coercion

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8
Q

If you are coerced into killing someone, how you can ask for mitigation?

A

Say that the fear of the threat made it impossible to premeditate and deliberate, so you could only be guilty of second-degree murder

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9
Q

What are the big differences between common-law duress and MPC duress?

A

MPC:

  • allows duress even for murder
  • has no immediate harm requirement
  • gives the jury more power
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10
Q

Basically what is the MPC duress question?

A

Would a person of reasonable firmness in the defendant’s situation have been unable to resist the threat? If so, you are excused

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11
Q

How is the battered woman syndrome related to duress?

A

When the man continually breaks down the personality of the woman, and renders her submissive to whatever suggestions he makes

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12
Q

When is the defense of duress not available?

A

When the actor negligently or recklessly puts himself in a situation that it is probable he will be subject to duress

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13
Q

What is imperfect duress?

A

When duress mitigates a homicide to voluntary manslaughter because the defendant killed under extreme emotional duress

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14
Q

Consent is only a defense when what?

A

It negates an element of the offense or stops infliction of the harm that the law is meant to prevent

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15
Q

Why can’t a victim condone or ratify a crime after it is happened?

A

A criminal offense is a wrong affecting the general public, so an individual directly hurt cannot give license to it

16
Q

What is the only way to have consent?

A

If it is voluntary and given by a fully informed person with legal capacity or authority to consent

17
Q

If consent is gotten by trick, threats, or from a minor, is it effective?

A

No

18
Q

What are the crimes that consent can be a defense to?

A
  • burglary
  • battery
  • rape
  • theft
  • kidnapping
19
Q

If a crime is defined by the victim’s lack of consent, then if the victim gives consent, what does that do?

A

Bars conviction

20
Q

If you are legally incompetent, can you consent to anything?

A

No

21
Q

What is the only situation where a battery can be consented to?

A

If the harm isn’t serious

22
Q

What are situations where consent is ineffective?

A

If the victim is:

  • a minor
  • insane
  • intoxicated
  • forced by duress or deception
23
Q

How can engaging in activity that you know poses a degree of risk/harm be consent?

A

Athletic events, scientific experiments, etc.

24
Q

If you engage in an activity that you know poses a degree of risk of harm, what have you consented to?

A

The reasonable and foreseeable hazards of participation

25
Q

If you engage in a sports activity that you know poses some degree of risk of harm, what have you consented to?

A

Harm that is within the rules of the game and minor deviations from the rules, but not unprovoked super violent attacks

26
Q

Can a victim consent to being maimed, killed, or seriously injured?

A

No

27
Q

What is conditional consent?

A

Consent that is limited to the condition

28
Q

What is an example of conditional consent?

A

WWF where you consent to fake wrestling, not real wrestling

29
Q

What is the mnemonic to help remember the crimes that can be consented to?

A

BRB TK

30
Q

What does BRB TK stand for?

A
  • Burglary
  • Rape
  • Battery
  • Theft
  • Kidnapping