Criminal Law Flashcards

1
Q

When can failure to act be basis for criminal liability?

A

1) Imposed by statute
2) Contract
3) Special relationship
4) Detrimental Undertaking
5) Defendant causes peril

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2
Q

Common law malice

A

= a reckless disregard of a substantial or high risk of harm.

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3
Q

Strict liability crimes

A

Selling adulterated food or drugs

Bigamy

Statutory rape

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4
Q

Corporate liability

A

Corporations cannot have mens rea, so no liability at common law. Liability must be imposed by statute.

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5
Q

NY: mental states.

A

NY uses MPC mental states:

1) Purposely: conscious object to cause certain result.
2) Knowingly or willfully: defendants is aware or knows of circumstances required by the crime OR that particular result is likely to occur.

3) Recklessly: acts with conscious disregard of a substantial and unjustifiable risk.
4) Negligent: should be aware of substantial and unjustifiable risk.

If statute is silent as to mens rea, then 1-3 presumed to suffice.

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6
Q

Causation in homicide

A

1) Actual/”but for” cause

2) Proximate cause: death was foreseeable result.
- Pre-existing condition does NOT break chain.

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7
Q

NY: multiple shooters

A

If two defendants shoot a victim and both have requisite mens rea, both can be charged as accomplices regardless of who actually killed the victim.

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8
Q

Four mental states of common law murder

A

1) Intent to kill (inferred if deadly weapon used).
2) intent to inflict serious bodily harm.
3) depraved heart killings.

4) Felony murder (“BARRK”)
- Burglary, Arson, Robbery, Rape, Kidnapping.

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9
Q

Voluntary manslaughter

A

AKA “heat of passion”.

= in response to adequate provocation.

  • provocation
  • threat of serious battery or deadly force.
  • discovery of adultery.
  • words NOT sufficient.
  • must NOT have time to cool off.
  • provocation can transfer if reasonable mistake of fact about identity of provoker.
  • imperfect self-defense
  • defendant was initial aggressor; OR
  • honest but unreasonable belief.
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10
Q

Involuntary manslaughter

A

= unintentional homicide committed with criminal negligence OR during commission of malum in se misdemeanor or non-BARRK felony.

Example: drunk driving that falls short of depraved heart murder.

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11
Q

NY: murder

A
  • First degree murder
    1) intentional killing of police, peace officer, corrections, witness, or judge.
    2) murder for hire.
    3) felony murder where defendant personally and intentionally kills someone other than co-felon in BRAKERS felony (Burglary, Robbery, Arson, Kidnapping, Escape, Rape, Sexual Abuse).
    4) cruel and wanton intended to inflict torture on victim.
  • Second degree murder:
    1) intentional killing.
    2) depraved indifference.
    3) unintentional killing in course of BRAKERS felony murder, BUT subject to affirmative defenses:
    i) defendant did not commit homicidal act;
    ii) was unarmed;
    iii) reasonably believed accomplices were unarmed;
    iv) no reason to believe participants intended to engage in conduct likely to result in death.
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12
Q

NY: manslaughter

A
  • First degree manslaughter:
    1) death with intent to cause serious bodily injury.
    2) intentional killing under extreme emotional disturbance.
    3) abortion after 24 weeks.
    4) serious physical injury resulting in death of a child.
  • second degree manslaughter
    1) recklessly cause death of another.
    2) intentionally assist suicide or abortion where mother dies.
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13
Q

NY: vehicular homicide

A
  • Vehicular manslaughter in second degree
    = criminally negligent homicide caused while operation motor vehicle under influence of alcohol or drugs.
  • Vehicular manslaughter in the first degree = 2d degree + 1 of following factors:
    1) driving with BAC of >0.18
    2) Knowingly driving with license suspended due to DUI or failure to submit to breathalyzer.
    3) Driving after DUI within past 10 years.
    4) Causing death of more than 1 person.
    5) driving after prior conviction of vehicular assault or homicide.
    6) death of child passenger <15.
  • Aggravated vehicular manslaughter = 2d degree + driving reckless + killed one person and seriously injured at least 1 more OR any of 1-6 above for 1st degree.
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14
Q

NY: depraved indifference

A

1-on-1 killings can almost never be depraved indifference killings.

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15
Q

NY: criminally negligent homicide:

A

= cause death of another through criminal negligence. catch-all.

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16
Q

Larceny

A

1) trespassory taking
- lying = larceny by trick.

2) carrying away
- smallest movement suffices.

3) of personal property

4) of another
- honest mistake is defense.
- defense = superior possessory interest (e.g., joint owners, BUT NOT thief unless own property).
- low level employee = larceny, not embezzlement.
- bailee must take by opening closed container.
- NOT abandoned property.

5) with intent to permanently deprive.
- at time of taking.

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17
Q

Embezzlement

A

1) Fraudulent
2) Conversion
3) of the personal property
4) of another
5) by a person who is in lawful possession of the property.

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18
Q

False pretenses

A

1) obtaining title to property
2) of another person
3) through reliance of that person
4) on a false rep of a material past of present fact (NOT future fact/promise)

5) intent to defraud.
- willfull ignorance of fact can be intent.

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19
Q

NY theft crimes

A

“Larceny” includes common law larceny, larceny by trick, embezzlement, and false pretenses, and extortion.

*Evidence of evasiveness and dubious excuses to return goods = inference of intent to permanently deprive.

  • Degrees of larceny depend on value of property stolen.
    1) 1d degree = >1mil.
    2) 2d degree = >50k OR extortion by threat to person or property OR threat to abuse public position.
    3) 3d degree = >3k
    4) 4th degree = >1k OR taking public record, scientific material, credit card, firearm, car >100, telephonic device, religious article OR extortion.
    5) Petit larceny = <1k
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20
Q

Robbery

A

= Larceny +

1) Force of intimidation
2) from or in presence of victim.

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21
Q

NY: 3 degrees of robbery

A
  • 1d robbery
    1) Non-participant is seriously injured.
    2) Defendant armed with deadly weapon.
    3) Threatens use of dangerous instrument.
  • 2d robbery
    1) aided by someone else.
    2) non-participant is injured.
    3) displays what appears to be weapon.
    4) stealing car.
  • 3d robbery = all others.
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22
Q

Burglary

A

1) breaking
- NO consent.
- NO open doors.

2) entering
3) dwelling
4) of another

5) at night
- too dark to see face.

6) with specific intent to commit felony therein.
- NO merger between burglary and underlying felony.

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23
Q

NY: burglary

A

NO requirement of at night.

NO breaking requirement; need only enter OR remain.

  • Degree depends on type of building:
    1) 1d = dwelling + armed OR uses force OR injures nonparticipant.
    2) 2d = dwelling.
    3) 3d = any kind of building.
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24
Q

Receipt of stolen property

A

1) receive stolen property
2) with knowledge that it is stolen
3) with intent to permanently deprive owner.

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25
Q

Battery

A

1) Unlawful
2) application of force
3) to another person
4) that causes bodily harm OR constitutes offensive touching.

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26
Q

Assault

A

= attempted battery OR intentionally placing another in apprehension of immediate bodily harm.
-requires INTENT.

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27
Q

NY: battery and assault

A
"Assault" = common law battery and mayhem.
"Menacing" = common law assault.
  • 1d assault:
    1) intent to cause serious injury by means of deadly weapon or dangerous instrument OR
    2) causing serious injury with depraved indifference to human life or in course of felony.
  • 2d assault:
    1) intentionally cause seriously injury.
    2) injures another while incarcerated, on school grounds, of in course o felony.
    3) causes injury with deadly weapon or dangerous instrument.
    4) administers drugs or substances without consent and for nonlawful purpose.
    5) intentionally interferes with bus or train operators, police, firefighters in their duties.
  • 3d assault:
    1) intentionally or recklessly causing injury to a person.
    2) with criminal negligence, cause injury with deadly weapon or dangerous instrument.
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28
Q

NY: vehicular assault

A

*2d vehicular assault: cause serious physical injury while driving under influence of alcohol or drugs.

  • 1d vehicular assault = 2d +
    1) BAC > 0.18
    2) license suspended or revoked for DUI.
    3) previous DUI in last 10 years.
    4) seriously physical injury to 2+ people.
    5) previous conviction for assault or homicide.
    6) serious physical injury to child <15.
  • aggravated vehicular assault = 2d +
    1) driving recklessly AND factors 1-6 for 1d above.
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29
Q

NY: Reckless endangerment

A
  • 2d reckless endangerment = reckless engage in conduct creating substantial risk of serious physical injury to another person.
  • 1d reckless endangerment = with depraved indifference, recklessly creates grave risk of death.
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30
Q

Rape

A

1) Unlawful
2) Sexual intercourse
3) with female NOT wife
4) against will by force of threat of immediate force. (most modern statutes don’t require force).
- NOT economic duress.
- fraud in inducement does NOT negate consent.
- fraud in factum negates consent.

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31
Q

NY: Rape

A
  • Applies to men and women.
  • 3d rape:
    1) >17yo but incapable of consent.
    2) without consent by reason other than incapacity to consent.
    3) >21yo sex with 18yo sex with 18yo sex with <13yo.
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32
Q

Kidnapping

A

(1) Unlawful
(2) Confinement
(3) against will
(4) + movement or hiding of the person.
- must me more than change in location incidental to other crime.

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33
Q

NY: Kidnapping

A
  • 2d = common law kidnapping.
  • 1d = 2d +
    1) intent to compel pmt of ransom.
    2) intent to compel or dissuade particular conduct.
    3) 12+ hours with intent to inflict injury, torture, advance felony, or interfere with a government function.
34
Q

False imprisonment

A

1) Unlawful
2) Confinement
3) without consent.

35
Q

NY: false imprisonment

A
  • 2d = same as common law.

* 1d = exposes victim to risk of serious physical injury.

36
Q

Arson

A

1) Malicious
2) Burning
3) of the dwelling
4) of another person

37
Q

NY: Arson

A

Includes all individual property, buildings, motor vehicles, and watercraft.

  • 4d = reckless damage by intentionally starting fire. (proprietary interest in property is affirmative defense).
  • 3d = intentional damage by intentionally starting fire. Affirmative defense if: (i) all proprietary interests consented, (ii) sole intent was to destroy for lawful and proper purpose, and (iii) no reasonable ground to expect damage to other property or person.
  • 2d = intentional damage by intentionally starting fire where:
    1) a nonparticipant is present and
    2) defendant knows or has reason to know of other person.
  • 1d = 2d + use of incendiary device.
38
Q

Solicitation

A

1) Enticing, encouraging, or advising
2) to commit crime
3) with intent that person commits crime

  • Renunciation NOT a defense.
  • Groups protected by statute cannot be guilty of solicitation (e.g., children).
39
Q

NY: renunciation of solicitation

A

Renunciation is an affirmative defense to solicitation if:

1) voluntary and complete AND
2) successfully prevents commission of crime.

40
Q

Conspiracy

A

1) Agreement

2) between 2+ person
- unilateral conspiracy NOT sufficient at CL.
- if charged in same proceeding and 1 is acquitted, other must also be acquitted.

3) to accomplish an unlawful purpose
4) with intent to accomplish that purpose.

  • NO over act requirement at common law.
  • Withdrawal is NOT a defense.
  • Scope of liability:
    1) in furtherance of conspiracy AND
    2) reasonably foreseeable
41
Q

NY: conspriacy

A
  • NY follows MPC approach.
  • unilateral conspiracies are allowed.
  • requires overt act.
  • withdrawal is affirmative defense if coupled with substantial effort to prevent commission of conspiratorial plan.
  • NO liability for unplanned crimes. accomplice liability only.
  • Evidence to convict: cannot convict solely on testimony of co-conspirator.
42
Q

Attempt

A

1) Specific intent
- mistake of law negates mens rea.
- factual impossibility is NOT defense.

2) Substantial step
* Prosecution: if crime completed, can charge with either crime OR attempt.

43
Q

NY: attempt

A

Substantial step = engage in conduct very near the accomplishment of the intended crime.

44
Q

Doctrine of merger

A

Crime + conspiracy is OK.

Crime + attempt or solicitation is NOT OK.

45
Q

NY: doctrine of merger

A

Crime + conspiracy or solicitation is OK, UNLESS solicitation is part of crime.

Crime + attempt is NOT OK.

46
Q

Accomplice liability

A

1) Assists or encourages crime;
- help after crime = obstruction, NOT aiding and abetting.
2) with intent to aid or encourage.

  • At CL, if principal is acquitted, accomplice must also be acquitted.
  • Withdrawal:
    1) repudiate
    2) do everything possible to countermand previous assistance
    3) before chain of events is set in motion.
47
Q

NY: principal and accomplice liability

A

If principal is acquitted, accomplice can still be convicted.

  • defendant may not be convicted solely on testimony of accomplice.
48
Q

NY: accomplice withdrawal

A

1) renounce criminal purpose
2) withdraw prior to commission of crime
3) make substantial effort to prevent commission of the crime.

49
Q

M’Naghten test for insanity

A

“Right from wrong” test:

1) due to defect of reason due to mental disease;
2) either did not know nature and quality of act OR the wrongfulness of the act.

50
Q

Irresistible impulse test for insanity

A

1) due to mental disease or defect;

2) unable to conform conduct to law.

51
Q

Durham rule for insanity

A

“But for” test:

1) due to mental disease or defect;
2) would not have been committed but for the defect.

52
Q

MPC test for insanity

A

1) due to mental disease or defect

2) lacks substantial capacity to appreciate wrongfulness of conduct OR conform conduct to the law.

53
Q

NY: insanity defense

A

1) due to mental disease or defect

2) lacked substantial capacity to know or appreciate nature and consequences of conduct OR that conduct was wrong.

54
Q

Voluntary intoxication

A

Defense to specific intent crimes.

NOT a defense to malice, recklessness, or negligence.

55
Q

Involuntary intoxication

A

Can negate any element of the crime.

  • Must show intoxication occurred without knowledge that it was booze OR under duress.
56
Q

Infancy

A

<7yo = no liability.

7-14 = rebuttably presumed to be incapable.

14+ = tried as an adult.

57
Q

NY: infancy

A

<16yo NOT responsible UNLESS:

1) 13-15yo charged with 2d murder.
2) 14-15yo charged with kidnapping, arson, assault, manslaughter, rape, aggravated sexual abuse, burglary, robbery, attempted murder.

58
Q

Self-defense

A

1) immediate or imminent unlawful threat of harm to self.
2) use reasonable force.
- initial aggressor justified if (i) nondeadly force met with deadly force OR (ii) aggressor withdraws in good faith and clearly communicates withdrawal.
3) deadly force ONLY IF reasonably necessary to prevent death or serious injury OR prevent serious felony.

  • No duty to retreat.
59
Q

NY: deadly force

A

Can use deadly force ONLY IF:

1) reasonable belief deadly force is about to be used against self AND
2) cannot retreat safely as to self and others, OR within own home.

OR

3) to prevent arson.
- but NOT otherwise to defend property.

60
Q

Duress

A

1) third party unlawful threat
2) reasonably believes only way to avoid death or serious bodily injury to self or other is to violate the law
3) threat causes defendant to violate law.

NOT a defense to murder.

61
Q

NY: duress

A

Duress can be an affirmative defense to murder.

62
Q

Necessity

A

Forces of nature cause defendant to commit what would otherwise be a crime.

63
Q

Entrapment

A

1) crime was induced by govt official or agent.

2) defendant was not predisposed to commit the crime.

64
Q

NY: Entrapment

A

1) govt official induces or encourages crime
2) using methods of persuasion that create substantial risk that crime will be committed by those other than those ready to commit it.

65
Q

Specific intent crimes

A

FIAT:
First-degree murder
Inchoate: attempt, solicitation, conspiracy.
Assault with intent to commit battery.
Theft: larceny, false pretenses, embezzlement, forgery, burglary, robbery.

66
Q

Transferred intent

A

ONLY for homicide, battery, arson.

67
Q

MPC standard for corporate liability

A

1) fails to discharge specific duty
2) management authorizes or recklessly tolerate offensive act.
3) statute imposes liability.

68
Q

Territorial jurisdiction for crimes

A

Federal: in federally owned territory, US nationals abroad, conduct on ships or airplanes.

69
Q

NY: criminal facilitation

A

1) defendants believes it is probably he is rendering aid to someone who intends to commit a felony;
2) aid provides opportunity to commit crime;
3) person commits crime.

OR

adult gives aid to person under 16 who intends to engage in crime.

  • Cannot be convicted based on uncorraborated testimony of accomplice.
  • Defenses or failure to convict for underlying crime are NOT defenses to facilitation.
70
Q

Failure to report

A

NOT a crime, UNLESS deliberately give false info to police, THEN accessory after the fact.

71
Q

Misprision

A

Failure to prosecute or report a felon if defendant:

1) had full knowledge of felony;
2) failed to notify authorities;
3) took affirmative steps to conceal.

IF paid to conceal, THEN guilty of “compounding a crime.”

72
Q

Forgery

A

1) Fraudulent
2) Making
3) of a false writing
4) with apparent legal significance
5) with intent to defraud.

73
Q

NY: forgery

A

3d: intentionally making or altering a written instrument.
2d: intentionally making or altering instrument represented to be deed, will, codicil, contract, assignment, commercial instrument, credit card, public record, prescription, or public transport token.
1d: money, stamps, securities, stocks, bonds.

74
Q

NY: issuing a bad check

A

1) issues check knowing he doesn’t have sufficient funds;
2) intents payment to be refused by drawee;
3) payment is actually refused.

Affirmative defenses:

  • Paid in full within 10 days.
  • Employee was only following employer instructions.
75
Q

NY: criminal possession of stolen property

A

CL receiving stolen property +

5d: no minimum value.
4d: value 1k+, credit or debit card, firearm, car $100+, religious article.
3d: $3k+
2d: $50k+
1d: $1mil+

76
Q

NY: Eavesdropping

A

unlawful wiretapping or mechanical overhearing , or intercepting or accessing an electronic communication.

77
Q

NY: Offenses against children

A
  • Abandonment of a child: legally obligated person deserts child under 14 with intent to abandon. EXCEPTION: child less than 30 days old and appropriate person notified of location.
  • Non-support of child: fail to provide support for child under 16. if convicted twice in 5 years, then 1st degree offence.
  • Endangering welfare of a child:
    1) knowingly act in manner likely to injure child under 17, or authorizes child to act; OR
    2) fails to diligently supervise child under 18.
    UNLESS (i) religious belief or (ii) safe abandonment of child under 30 days old.
  • unlawful dealing with a child:
    1) knowingly permit child under 18 upon premises used for sex or drugs.
    2) alcohol access to person under 21.
    3) tattoos a child under 18.
    4) tobacco to child under 18.`
78
Q

NY: endangering the welfare of an incompetent of physically disabled person

A

Knowingly acts in manner likely to be injurious to welfare of person unable to care for self due to physical or mental defect.

79
Q

NY: Endangering welfare of a vulnerable elderly person

A

“vulnerable elderly person” = 60+ years unable to care to self.

caregiver

1) intentionally or recklessly causes injury.
2) negligently causes injury by means of dangerous instrument.
3) non-consensual sexual contact.

80
Q

NY: criminal nuisance

A

1) knowingly
2) maintain premises
3) where person gather for illegal conduct.
- illegal drugs = 1d offence.

OR

1) knowingly or recklessly
2) by unlawful or unreasonable conduct
3) maintain a condition
4) that endangers the health or safety of numerous person.

81
Q

NY: Harrassment

A

2d: with intent to harass, annoy, or alarm:
1) attempt threaten or subject another person to physical contact.
2) follow a person in a public place.
3) course of conduct that annoys or seriously alarms others and serves on useful purpose.

1d = 2d + reasonable fear of physical injury.

2d aggravated =

1) communicates by phone or writing in a manner likely to annoy or alarm.
2) makes calls with no purpose of legitimate communication.
3) attempts or threatens physical contact motivated by race, national origin, gender, religion, age, disability, or sexual orientation.
4) prior conviction for harassment within 10 years.

1d aggravated = motivated by race, national origin, gender, religion, age, disability, or sexual oritentation +

1) over $50 damages to church.
2) previous harassment conviction within 10 years.
3) swastika or noose.
4) setting cross on fire in public.

82
Q

NY: driving while intoxicated

A

1) Presumed impaired if BAC over 0.8;

2) If under 21, then NO alcohol at all.