Discuss the four broad categories of criminal defenses that our legal system recognizes
Explain the legal concept of insanity
Law refers to:
Law refers to:
Statutory law is often the result of moral enterprise by interest groups that, through the exercise of political power, are successful in seeing their valued perspectives enacted into law. (A process of debate and compromise.)
What Do Laws Do?
What Do Laws Do?
Statutory law refers to:
Statutory law refers to:
Case law refers to:
Common law refers to:
Common law refers to:
The term refers to an unwritten body of judicial opinion, originally developed by English courts.
The rule of law has been called the greatest political achievement of our culture.
Elements of the rule of law
Elements of the rule of law
Freedom from private lawlessness provided by the legal system of a politically organized society
A relatively high degree of objectivity in the formulation of legal norms and a like degree of evenhandedness in their application
Elements of the rule of law
Elements of the rule of law
Legal ideas and juristic devices for the attainment of individual and group objectives within the bounds of ordered liberty
Substantive and procedural limitations on governmental power in the interest of the individual for the enforcement of which there are appropriate legal institutions and machinery
“Americans are free to disagree with the law, but not to disobey it…”
“Americans are free to disagree with the law, but not to disobey it…”
- President John F. Kennedy
Jurisprudence refers to:
Criminal law refers to:
Criminal law refers to:
Penal code refers to:
Substantive criminal law refers to:
Substantive criminal law refers to:
There are variations among jurisdictions.
Civil law refers to:
Civil law refers to:
Civil law contains rules for contractual and social obligations.
Tort refers to:
Administrative law refers to:
Administrative law refers to:
Examples of Administrative laws include:
Precedent refers to:
Precedent refers to:
Stare decisis refers to:
Procedural law refers to:
Procedural law refers to:
It includes general rules of evidence, search and seizure, procedures to be followed in an arrest, rules of court and other specified processes.
Felonies
Felonies
Misdemeanors
Offenses = Infractions
Treason and espionage (Cit. vs. Non-Cit.)
Inchoate offenses (incomplete / partial)
Felony refers to:
Felony refers to:
(A crime classified as a felony in one part of the country may be a misdemeanor in another.)
Misdemeanors refer to:
Misdemeanors refer to:
Most receive suspended sentences involving a fine and supervised probation.
(Normally, an officer cannot arrest for a misdemeanor unless it was committed in the officer’s presence.)
Infraction refers to:
Infraction refers to:
Treason refers to:
Treason refers to:
Espionage refers to:
Inchoate offense refers to:
Inchoate offense refers to:
Conspiracy
Attempt
The essence of crime consists of three conjoined elements:
The essence of crime consists of three conjoined elements:
The criminal act,
A culpable mental state, and
The concurrence of the two.
Actus reus refers to:
Actus reus refers to:
An omission to act where the person is required by law to do something
A rule for determining insanity, which asks whether the defendant has a diagnosable mental illness and if that illness interfered with the defendant’s ability to know right from wrong.
Irresistible impulse
Irresistible impulse
The defendant knew what he or she was doing and that it was wrong, but could not stop the act.
Durham rule
A person is not criminally responsible for his or her behavior if the person’s illegal actions were the result of some mental disease or defect.
Substantial capacity test
Substantial capacity test
Found in the Model Penal Code, it suggests that insanity should be defined as the lack of a substantial capacity to control one’s behavior.
Brawner rule
Places responsibility for deciding insanity squarely with the jury.
Guilty but mentally ill (GBMI)
Guilty but mentally ill (GBMI)
Every statutory element necessary for a conviction has been proved beyond a reasonable doubt.