Criminal Law And Procedure An Overview 4th Edition by Ronald J. Bacigal - Study Guide

Criminal Law And Procedure An Overview 4th Edition by Ronald J. Bacigal - Study Guide   Instant Download - Complete Test Bank With Answers     Sample Questions Are Posted Below   CHAPTER 5: CRIMES AGAINST A PERSON This chapter focuses on crimes that are committed against an individual person, beginning with the most serious …

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Criminal Law And Procedure An Overview 4th Edition by Ronald J. Bacigal – Study Guide

 

Instant Download – Complete Test Bank With Answers

 

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

CHAPTER 5: CRIMES AGAINST A PERSON

This chapter focuses on crimes that are committed against an individual person, beginning with the most serious crime: criminal homicide. To distinguish which specific type of criminal homicide has been committed, the courts will look to the intent of the defendant. This becomes very important when distinguishing between murder and manslaughter.

Of a less serious nature are the crimes of assault and battery. This chapter discusses the various types of assault and ends by reviewing robbery, violent sex crimes, kidnapping, and false imprisonment.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

Once you have finished this chapter, you should be able to:

  • Identify and define the types of criminal homicide.
  • Distinguish between kidnapping and false imprisonment.
  • Outline the different elements of both assault and battery.
  • Explain the theory underlying the rape shield law.
  • Recognize the different categories of hate crimes.

OUTLINE

  1. Criminal Homicide—taking another’s life in a manner proscribed by law; a killing in the absence of justification or excuse
  2. Suicide
  3. Murder—an unlawful killing with malice aforethought
  4. Malice aforethought—distinguishes murder from manslaughter; occurs when the defendant:
  5. Forms an intent to kill
  6. Forms an intent to inflict grievous bodily harm on another
  7. Displays a wanton or extremely reckless disregard for the risk to human life
  8. Commits a dangerous felony during the commission of which a death results
  9. Capital murder—a killing characterized by the existence of a statutorily defined aggravating circumstance in addition to the other requirements for murder
  10. First degree murder—a killing characterized by premeditation
  11. Premeditation—careful, prior deliberation of an act committed in cold blood
  12. Instantaneous premeditation—a view of forethought to the crime that recognizes that “no time is too short for a wicked man to frame in his mind the scheme of murder”
  13. Transferred intent—the act of killing a person while intending to kill someone else
  14. Felony-murder rule—applies a first degree murder charge to killing a person intentionally, recklessly, or even accidentally while committing a dangerous felony
  15. Second degree murder—a killing with a wanton state of mind or an extremely reckless disregard for the risk to human life
  16. Manslaughter—an unlawful killing without malice aforethought
  17. Voluntary manslaughter—killing:
  18. While in a state of passion (factual determination for the factfinder to make)
  19. That was caused by adequate provocation (circumstances that “would naturally tend to arouse the passion of an ordinarily reasonable person”)
  20. Without a reasonable opportunity to cool off before killing
  21. Involuntary manslaughter—a homicide that results from the defendant’s criminally negligent conduct or the defendant’s commission of an unlawful act
  22. Reckless conduct—less serious than extreme recklessness but more serious than simple negligence resulting in civil liability; courts consider both the defendant’s subjective state of mind and objective evidence of the extent to which the defendant’s conduct endangered another
  23. Misdemeanor-manslaughter rule—applies a manslaughter charge to a homicide that results from the defendant’s commission of an unlawful act
  24. Other forms of homicide—in most jurisdictions, involuntary manslaughter is the lowest degree of criminal homicide; some jurisdictions, however, have enacted statutes creating the crime of negligent homicide
  25. Assault and Battery—some jurisdictions have merged assault and battery into a single offense
  26. Battery—the unlawful application of force to the person of another (unlawful touching)
  27. A person cannot consent to any type of conduct that involves serious injury
  28. Unlawful touching may involve direct body-to-body contact or an indirect touching by some instrumentality used by the defendant
  29. Mental state—either an intent to strike another or a reckless act that results in a touching
  30. Assault
  31. Occurs only if the defendant accompanies a threat with some additional physical conduct
  32. Two categories of assault
  33. Attempted battery form of assault—an act in which the defendant specifically intends to, and comes close to, touching another
  34. Offer type of assault—places another in fear of an imminent battery
  35. Stalking—following, harassing, threatening, lying in wait, or conducting surveillance of another person
  36. Aggravated assault and battery—an attack that results in a more serious injury or creates the potential for serious injury because the attacker used a deadly weapon
  37. Mayhem—a common law crime in which the victim was dismembered or disfigured in such a way that the victim was less able to engage in self-defense
  38. Malicious wounding—the shooting, stabbing, cutting, or wounding of any person with the intent to maim, disfigure, disable, or kill
  • Robbery—larceny from the victim’s person or presence, by use of either force or threats of force
  1. Extortion or blackmail—threats to injure a person’s reputation or to expose a person to shame and ridicule
  2. Violent Sex Crimes
  3. Common law rape—sexual intercourse with a woman other than the defendant’s wife by force and without the victim’s consent
  4. Most statutes today have made the crime of rape gender neutral
  5. Marital rape exception—at common law, a man could not be convicted of raping his wife
  6. Based on the theory that a wife was chattel and that when she married her husband, she gave continuing consent to sex with him
  7. Most jurisdictions today, even those that retain the marital rape exception, recognize that a man who physically forces his wife to have sex with him is guilty of some form of assault and battery or the newly recognized crime of marital rape
  8. Rape shield laws—laws that prohibit the use of evidence of a victim’s prior sexual conduct, except for prior consensual sexual relations with the defendant
  9. Kidnapping and False Imprisonment
  10. Kidnapping—seizing and carrying away another person by force, threat of force, fraud, or deception (aggravated form of false imprisonment)
  11. If the victim is not returned within 24 hours after the taking, it is presumed that the victim was transported across state lines, which makes it a federal offense
  12. The carrying away of the victim requires that the forced movement be more than the movement incidental to the commission of another crime
  13. False imprisonment—confining a person against the person’s will
  14. Civil Rights and Hate Crimes
  15. Civil rights statutes
  16. Hate crimes

KEY TERMS

 

adequate provocation

attempted battery form of assault

battery

blackmail

capital murder

common law rape

criminal homicide

extortion

false imprisonment

felony-murder rule

first degree murder

instantaneous premeditation

involuntary manslaughter

kidnapping

malice aforethought

malicious wounding

mayhem

misdemeanor-manslaughter rule

offer type of assault

premeditation

rape shield laws

robbery

second degree murder

transferred intent

voluntary manslaughter

wanton state of mind

 

HELPFUL WEB SITES

U.S. Department of Justice

http://www.usdoj.gov

Includes access to a separate division dealing with violence against women.

National Coalition against Domestic Violence

http://www.ncadv.org

Access to conferences, proposals, and legislation addressing domestic violence.

National Center for Victims of Crime

http://www.ncvc.org

Access to a Stalking Resource Center.

 

 

The Oyez Project

http://www.oyez.org

Provides a variety of multimedia-based Supreme Court sources as well as audio archives of oral arguments.

REVIEW QUESTIONS

Fill-in-the-Blank

  1. ____________________ distinguishes murder from manslaughter.
  2. First degree murder is a killing that is most often characterized by ____________________.
  3. The Court in People v. Stamp used the ____________________ rule to find the defendant guilty of first degree murder.
  4. ____________________ places another in fear of an imminent battery.
  5. The crime of ____________________ occurs when the defendant shoots, stabs, cuts, or wounds any person with the intent to maim, disfigure, disable, or kill.
  6. The use of evidence of the prior sexual conduct of the victim of a rape, except for prior consensual sexual relations with the defendant, is prohibited by ____________________ laws.
  7. ____________________ is an aggravated form of false imprisonment.
  8. Larceny from the victim’s person or presence by the use of either force or the threat of force is called a ____________________.

Essay

  1. Define malice aforethought and explain how it distinguishes murder from manslaughter.
  2. Describe some of the factors that the court may look to when determining whether a killing was premeditated.
  3. Explain the difference between voluntary and involuntary manslaughter and give an example of each.
  4. Explain the marital rape exception, and explain how this exception originated.

Answers are on the following page.

NOTES

 

 

ANSWERS

Fill-in-the-Blank

  1. Malice aforethought
  2. premeditation
  3. felony-murder
  4. Offer type of assault
  5. malicious wounding
  6. rape shield
  7. Kidnapping
  8. robbery

Essay

  1. Malice aforethought occurs when the defendant forms an intent to kill, forms an intent to inflict bodily harm on another, displays a wanton or extremely reckless disregard for the risk to human life, or commits a dangerous felony during the commission of which a death results. Malice aforethought is an essential element of murder but does not exist in manslaughter.
  2. Evidence of planning activity and/or preconceived motives to kill, or the manner of killing, negates the likelihood of a sudden decision to kill.
  3. Voluntary manslaughter is a killing while in a state of passion, which is caused by adequate provocation and without a reasonable time to cool off. Involuntary manslaughter is a killing that results from the defendant’s reckless or criminally negligent conduct or the defendant’s commission of an unlawful act.
  4. The marital rape exception held that a man could not be convicted of raping his wife. This exception came from the theory that a wife was chattel and that when she married, she gave continuing consent to sex with her husband.

 

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