Mens Rea Flashcards

1
Q

Mens Rea

A

mental/internal feature of a crime

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2
Q

Purposely (MPC)

A

Acting with intent

D believes or hopes the result will occur

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3
Q

Knowingly (MPC)

A

D is aware that result is practically certain

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4
Q

Recklessly (MPC)

A

D has a conscious disregard of a substantial and unjustifiable risk

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5
Q

Negligently (MPC)

A

D should be aware of a substantial and unjustifiably risk (reasonable person standard)

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6
Q

Intent (common law)

A

Purpose AND Knowledge

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7
Q

General Intent

A

Only requires proof that D intended to commit the act that causes the harm. (actus reus)

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8
Q

Specific Intent

A

Requires proof that D acted with a special mental element above and beyond the MR required to commit AR.

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9
Q

Transferred Intent Doctrine

A

Liability is attributed to a defendant who, intending to kill or injure one person, accidentally kills or injures another person instead.

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10
Q

Willful Blindness in MPC

A

D has a “high probability” of knowledge.
Ex: Transporting cocaine. Actual knowledge is knowing what’s in the package. Willful Blindness is actively avoiding to learn what’s in the package.

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11
Q

Strict Liability

A

Offense that does not require a culpable mens rea for one or more of its elements.
Ex:
a. Public welfare offenses (ex. listeria outbreak case);
b. Statutory rape; and bigamy

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12
Q

Mistake of Fact

A

sometimes exculpatory (excused) if negates MR

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13
Q

Mistake of Fact (MPC)

A

A defense if the mistake negated the required mens rea of the offense.

Ex. A person is guilty of theft if he takes property of another with purpose to deprive him of it. If D sincerely believes that the property is his, then the mens rea is negated.

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14
Q

Mistake of Fact (Common Law) [General Intent]

A

(Harder for D)

i. D is not guilty if mistake of fact is reasonable and negates culpability (if acted reasonably, then not culpable).
ii. D’s mistake must also be in good faith.

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15
Q

Mistake of Fact (Common Law) [Specific Intent]

A

(Easier for D)

i. D is not guilty if mistake of fact negates specified MR.
ii. D’s mistake must be in good faith. It is irrelevant if it is reasonable.

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16
Q

Mistake of Law (MPC)

A

(rarely exculpatory if negates MR)

a. A defense if the mistake negated the required mens rea of the offense.

17
Q

Mistake of Law (Common Law)

A

a. Ignorance of the law is no excuse. Rare Exceptions:
i. Reasonable reliance on official statement of law;
ii. When the mistake negates the MR required of for the crime. (almost never an excuse)
i. Statute;
ii. Judicial decisions from jurisdiction’s highest court; or
iii. Official interpretation from public officer in charge of interpretation, administration or enforcement of the law (ex. Ethics Commission opinions).