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PREFACE=V

TABLE OF CASES=XXVII

PART 1. THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM LEGAL CONCEPTS OF CRIMINALITY

Chapter 1. Overview of Criminal Procedure=3

A. Procedure Between Arrest and Trial=3

1. Pre-Arrest Investigations=3

2. Arrest=4

3. Booking Process=4

4. First Appearance Before a Judicial Officer―Bail=4

5. Preliminary Hearing=4

6. Grand Jury Indictment=5

7. Arraignment and Plea=5

8. Pre-Trial Motions=5

B. The Trial=6

1. The Right to a Speedy Trial=7

2. Defendant's Right to the Assistance of an Attorney=7

3. The Right to a Jury Trial=7

4. Jury Selection=7

5. Opening Statements=8

6. The Prosecution's Evidence=8

7. The Defendant's Evidence=8

8. Closing Arguments=9

9. Instructions of the Court to the Jury=9

10. The Verdict of the Jury=9

11. The Motion for a New Trial=9

12. Sentencing=10

C. Post-Trial Proceedings=10

1. Probation=10

2. Parole=11

3. The Appeal=11

4. Collateral Attack and Habeas Corpus=11

D. Criminal Justice Professionals=12

1. Law Enforcement Agencies=12

2. Prosecutorial Agencies=12

3. The Defense Function=12

4. The Courts=13

5. The Coroner and the Medical Examiner=13

6. Magistrates=13

7. Court Clerks=14

8. Probation Officers=14

9. Paralegals=14

Note=14

Chapter 2. Essential Concepts of Criminality=15

A. The Prohibited Conduct―"Actus Reus"=15

1. Voluntary Act=15

State v. Hinkle=15

Notes and Questions=20

2. The Act of Possession=21

State v. Fox=21

Notes and Questions=25

3. Inaction=26

State v. Miranda=26

Notes and Questions=32

B. Mental State―"Mens Rea"=34

1. Specific and General Intent=34

State v. Trinkle=34

State v. Rocker=37

Notes=40

2. Model Penal Code Approach=42

3. Transferred Intent=43

Sagner v. State=43

Notes and Questions=45

4. Recklessness and Criminal Negligence=47

Santillanes v. State=47

Notes and Questions=51

5. Strict Liability and Lack of Criminal Intent as a Defense=51

State v. Loge=51

Notes and Questions=57

State v. Guminga=57

Notes and Questions=61

Morissette v. United States=62

Notes and Questions=69

6. Mistake and Ignorance=70

People v. Hernandez=70

Notes=74

United States of America v. United States District Court for the Central District of California (Kantor)=75

Notes=80

People v. Urziceanu=81

Notes and Questions=85

Ratzlaf v. United States=87

Notes and Questions=91

C. The Causal Connection=94

People v. Dlugash=94

United States v. Hatfield=100

Notes and Questions=103

People v. Rideout=103

Notes and Questions=107

State v. Grose=107

Notes and Questions=109

Velazquez v. State=110

Notes and Questions=114

D. Burden of Proof=117

1. From the Common Law to the Constitution=117

In re Winship=117

Notes and Questions=119

2. Presumptions and Shifting the Burden of Proof=121

Patterson v. New York=121

Notes and Questions=129

Dixon v. United States=129

Notes and Questions=132

Ring v. Arizona=132

Notes=136

Sandstrom v. Montana=137

Notes and Questions=142

County Court of Ulster County v. Allen=143

Notes and Questions=151

Chapter 3. The Power to Create Crimes and Its Limitations=153

A. Sources of the Criminal Law=154

1. The Common Law=154

Shaw v. Director of Public Prosecutions=154

Notes=161

2. Statutes and Judicial Construction=161

Caminetti v. U.S. ; Diggs v. U.S. ; Hays v. U.S.=162

Notes and Questions=168

3. Administrative Regulations=174

Hobbs v. Jones=174

United States v. Mitchell=179

Notes=182

4. The Federal-State Dichotomy=183

(A) The Constitution and Federal "Common Law"=183

The United States v. Hudson and Goodwin=184

(B) Direct Federal Interest Offenses=186

Sonzinsky v. United States=186

Note=187

United States v. Sharpnack=188

(C) The "Necessary and Proper" Offenses=188

United States v. States=189

Note=193

(D) The Commerce Clause Offenses=193

Gonzales v. Raich=193

Notes=205

(E) Civil Rights Offenses=207

(F) Federal Prosecutorial Discretion and State Law Enforcement=208

United States v. Jones=209

B. Problems in Defining Criminal Conduct=214

1. Suicide and Assisted Suicide=214

Washington v. Glucksberg=214

Notes=221

2. Defining "Dangerous" and "Deadly"=222

Commonwealth v. Davis=222

United States v. Moore=225

Note=229

Chapter 4. Constitutional Limitations on Defining Criminal Conduct=231

A. Due Process, Vagueness, Overbreadth and the First Amendment=231

Papachristou v. City of Jacksonville=231

City of Chicago v. Morales=236

Gooding, Warden v. Wilson=244

R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, Minnesota=247

Notes and Questions=252

Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union=253

Notes and Questions=259

B. The Right to Privacy and to Equal Protection=260

1. Origin of the Right of Privacy=260

Griswold v. Connecticut=260

Notes and Questions=267

2. Abortion as a Privacy Right=269

Roe v. Wade=269

Notes and Questions=280

3. Consensual Sodomy=283

Lawrence v. Texas=284

Notes=294

C. The Prohibition Against Cruel and Unusual Punishment=296

1. Punishment for Narcotic Addiction and Alcoholism=296

Robinson v. California=296

Note=304

2. The Death Penalty=304

Gregg v. Georgia=304

Notes=316

McCleskey v. Kemp=321

Notes and Questions=329

Atkins v. Virginia=330

Roper v. Simmons=343

Notes=356

3. Disproportionality of Sentences=357

Rummel v. Estelle, Corrections Director=357

Notes and Questions=367

D. Exclusion of Evidence From Criminal Trials=369

Mapp v. Ohio=369

Notes and Questions=373

PART 2. CRIMES

Chapter 5. Homicides=377

A. Murder=377

1. When Does Death Occur?=377

(A) Proving Death―The "Corpus Delicti"=378

State v. Grissom=378

Notes=381

2. When Does Life Begin?=384

Keeler v. Superior Court=384

Notes=393

3. The Malice Factor=395

Commonwealth v. Webster=395

Notes : "Malice Aforethought"=401

State v. Guthrie=403

Midgett v. State=410

Notes=417

Langford v. State=419

Notes=422

4. Euthanasia―"Mercy Killings"=423

Notes=424

People v. Kevorkian=425

5. Felony Murder=434

Commonwealth v. Almeida=434

Notes=436

Commonwealth ex rel. Smith v. Myers=437

Notes=444

Muhammad v. Commonwealth=446

Notes=456

People v. Salas=457

Notes=463

Note : The Lindbergh-Hauptmann Case=464

Note=465

Note : Elimination of the Felony-Murder Rule=465

B. Voluntary Manslaughter=466

Director of Public Prosecutions Appellant v. Camplin=467

Note=471

Note : What Constitutes Provocation=471

Note : Cooling of Blood=473

C. Justifiable Use of Deadly Force=474

1. Self Defense=474

People v. Goetz=474

Notes=479

Note : The "Retreat Rule" or "Castle Doctrine"=480

Note : The "Imperfect" Self-Defense=481

Commonwealth v. Cary=482

Notes=491

2. Defense of Others=493

State v. Beeley=493

Notes=496

3. Defense of Habitation=497

People v. McNeese=497

Notes=502

4. Defense of Property Other Than a Dwelling=503

5. Prevention of Felony and Apprehension of Dangerous Felons=503

6. Deadly Force by Police Officers=504

Tennessee v. Garner=504

Notes=511

7. Forcibly Resisting Arrest=513

Commonwealth v. Hill=513

D. Involuntary Manslaughter=516

State v. Horton=516

Note=518

People v. Marshall=518

Commonwealth v. Feinberg=520

Notes=522

Chapter 6. "Sex" Offenses and Related Problems=525

A. Rape (Criminal Sexual Assault)=525

1. The Prevalence of the Problem=525

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, The National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey 2010 Summary Report (2011)=525

Notes=528

2. The Actus Reus of Rape and Sexual Assault : The Issues of Force and Consent=528

(A) Unconscious or Impaired Victims=529

Commonwealth v. Urban=529

Notes=532

(B) Developmentally Disabled Victims=532

People v. Thompson=532

Notes : Impaired or Developmentally Disabled Victims=537

(C) Fraud in the Inducement and Fraud in the Factum=538

Boro v. Superior Court=538

Notes : Fraud and Rape=541

(D) "Statutory" Rape=543

Garnett v. State=544

Notes on Statutory Rape=547

(E) Acquaintance Rape : Does Acquiescence Equal Consent?=549

State v. Rusk=549

Notes=560

Commonwealth v. Berkowitz=562

Notes=570

State of New Jersey In the Interest of M.T.S.=571

Notes=578

(F) Withdrawn Consent=580

State v. Bunyard=580

Notes on Withdrawal of Consent=583

2. "Unlawful" Carnal Knowledge : The Spousal Exception=584

People v. Liberta=585

Notes on Marital Rape=588

B. Special Issues of Proof in Rape Cases=589

1. "Rape Shield" Statutes=589

State v. Johnson=589

Notes=595

State v. Colbath=596

Notes=599

2. Charging Issues=602

State v. Rummer=602

Notes : Multiple Charges in Sex Assault Cases=614

Chapter 7. Misappropriation and Related Property Offenses=617

A. The Pigeon Hole Problem at Common Law=617

Weldon v. State=617

Notes=618

B. Larceny=619

1. Elements of Larceny=620

(A) Mens Rea : Intent to Deprive=621

Hugo v. City of Fairbanks=621

United States v. Donato-Morales=627

Notes on Intent to Deprive=632

Problems : Intent to Deprive=634

(B) Actus Reus : Taking and Carrying Away=634

State v. Donaldson=635

Lee v. State=638

Problems : "Taking and Carrying Away"=642

(C) Property of Another=643

(1) What is "Property" for Purposes of Larceny and Theft?=643

Notes : Property Capable of Being Stolen=645

(2) What is Property "of another?"=647

In re the Personal Restraint of John Tortorelli=647

Note on Taking of Abandoned, Lost Found Goods=654

(D) Grades of Larceny=655

DiMaio v. Commonwealth=656

Notes : Valuation=658

C. Larceny by Trick=660

The King v. Pear=660

Notes=661

State v. Bugely=662

Notes=664

D. False Pretenses=665

Baker v. Commonwealth=665

Note=666

Davies v. Commonwealth=666

Notes=668

People v. DeWald=669

Notes=671

E. Embezzlement=673

The King v. Bazeley=673

Notes=677

State v. Lough=678

F. Receiving and Transporting Stolen Property and Related Offenses=683

People v. Rife=683

Notes=685

State v. Chester=686

Notes=687

G. Consolidation of Theft Offenses=689

Notes=694

H. Extortion=695

State v. Harrington=695

I. Robbery=700

1. Elements of Robbery=700

(A) The Mens Rea of Robbery=701

Thomas v. State=701

Notes on Claim of Right in Robbery Cases=704

(B) Force, Fear and Intimidation Issues=705

Commonwealth v. Cruz=705

Notes on Robbery=707

2. Armed Robbery=708

Notes on Armed Robbery=708

J. Burglary : Common Law and Modern Statutes=709

1. The Elements of Common Law Burglary=709

2. Interpreting the Common Law and Modern Statutory Elements of Burglary=710

(A) "Breaking and Entering"=710

(B) The Dwelling House of Another=711

State v. Wentz=713

Note=717

(C) Nighttime=718

(D) With Intent to Commit a Felony=719

Massey v. United States=719

Notes=723

K. Arson=724

State v. Rogers=724

Chapter 8. Uncompleted Criminal Conduct and Criminal Combinations=731

A. Attempt=731

1. Punishing Attempts=731

Notes : Punishing Attempts=732

2. Mens Rea Issues in Attempt=734

Harrison v. State=734

Notes : Mens Rea in Criminal Attempts=746

State v. Hemmer=748

Notes : What May Be Attempted?=752

3. The Actus Reus of Attempt=753

People v. Rizzo=754

Notes : The Difficulty of Defining Attempt=756

United States v. Joyce=756

United States v. Yossunthorn=761

Notes=764

Kolmeier v. State=765

Notes : Equipment and Criminal Attempts=767

4. Impossibility of Completion=770

Hix v. Commonwealth=771

Notes : Impossible Attempts=776

5. Renunciation or Abandonment of Attempts=778

Gravens v. State=778

Notes=781

Problem : Renunciation or Abandonment of Criminal Attempts=783

B. Accessoryship : Aiding and Abetting=783

1. Evolution of Accessoryship=783

2. What Mens Rea Is Required of an Accessory?=784

Oates v. State=785

Notes=788

People v. Medina=791

Notes=797

3. The Actus Reus of Accessoryship=797

United States v. Ortiz=797

State ex rel. M.B.=801

Notes=804

4. Limitations on Accessoryship=805

Miller v. Skumanick=805

Notes=808

5. Hindering Prosecution : Accessories After the Fact and Related Offenses=809

(A) Accessory After the Fact=809

People v. Zierlion=810

(B) Misprision of Felony=811

(C) Compounding a Crime=812

(D) Hindering Prosecution=812

Notes : Post-Crime Assistance=813

C. Solicitation=814

State v. Disanto=814

D. Conspiracy=825

Krulewitch v. United States=826

1. The Agreement=828

(A) Multiple Agreements=829

Braverman v. United States=829

Notes=831

(B) Unilateral and Bilateral Conspiracies=832

State of Connecticut v. Jose Colón=832

Notes=840

(C) Wharton's Rule and Necessary Parties=841

People v. Lee=841

Notes=849

(D) "Wheel and Spoke" and "Chain" Conspiracies=851

State v. Samuel Maduro=851

Notes=855

2. Scope of Co-Conspirator Liability=856

United States v. Falcone=856

Notes=859

Pinkerton v. United States=862

Notes : Conspirator Liability=864

PART 3. SPECIAL DEFENSES TO CRIMINAL PROSECUTIONS

Chapter 9. Entrapment=871

A. The Development of an American Legal Defense to Crime=871

United States v. Russell=872

Hampton v. United States=882

Jacobson v. United States=885

Notes and Questions=894

B. Limitations on Use of the Defense=898

Mathews v. United States=898

Notes=903

C. Due Process Violations or Entrapment as a Matter of Law=904

1. Entrapment as a Matter of Law=905

United States v. Knox=905

State v. Blanco=910

2. Sentencing Entrapment, Sentencing Manipulation, and the Due Process Defense=916

People v. Smith et al.=916

Notes and Questions=923

3. Perjury Entrapment=926

U.S. v. Sarihifard=926

Note=928

Chapter 10. Compulsion, Intoxication, Automatism and Other Non-Controllable Factors=929

A. Compulsion=929

1. Duress=929

State v. St. Clair=929

Notes and Questions=931

2. Necessity=933

Notes=934

United States v. Bailey=935

Notes=946

United States v. Oakland Cannabis Buyers' Cooperative and Jeffrey Jones=947

Notes and Questions=953

B. Intoxication=954

1. Voluntary Intoxication=954

People v. Langworthy=954

Notes and Questions=961

2. Involuntary Intoxication=963

State v. Hall=963

Notes and Questions=968

3. Addiction=968

Powell v. Texas=968

Notes and Questions=978

C. Automatism=979

Fulcher v. State=979

Notes=984

D. Syndrome Defenses=985

State v. Stewart=986

Notes and Questions=992

State v. Grecinger=993

Chapter 11. Insanity at Time of the Prohibited Act and Competency to Stand Trial=1001

A. Distinguishing Competency from Insanity=1001

B. The M'Naghten (Right/Wrong) Test=1002

Daniel M'Naghten's Case=1002

Notes=1004

People v. Serravo=1007

C. The Irresistible Impulse Test=1020

Parsons v. State=1020

Notes=1024

D. The "Product" Test=1025

Durham v. United States=1025

Notes=1029

E. The American Law Institute (A.L.I.) Model Penal Code Test, and its Recent Modifications=1029

Notes : A.L.I.-MPC Definition of Insanity=1031

F. The Federal Test=1032

G. Diminished Responsibility=1033

Fisher v. United States=1033

Notes on Diminished Responsibility=1038

H. Attempts to Abolish or Limit the Insanity Defense=1039

State v. Korell=1040

Notes on Attempts to Abolish or Limit the Insanity Defense=1050

I. The Weight of Psychiatric Testimony=1052

People v. Wolff=1052

Notes=1058

McCulloch v. Commonwealth=1059

Notes=1062

J. Special Problems with Detention of Insanity Acquittees=1063

K. Special Issues of Proof in Insanity Defense Cases=1064

Notes : Issues of Proof in Insanity Defense Cases=1064

PART 4. OFFENSES AGAINST SOVEREIGNTY

Chapter 12. Offenses Against Government Authority=1069

A. Introduction : Historical Overview of Crimes Against Government=1069

Korematsu v. United States=1072

Notes and Questions=1076

B. Investigation=1076

1. Surveillance=1076

2. Extraordinary Rendition=1077

3. Classified Information=1078

4. The USA Patriot Act=1079

The Blueing of America : The Bridge Between the War on Drugs and the War on Terrorism=1079

C. The Use of Traditional Offenses to Combat Threats to the State=1086

1. Refusal to Testify Before Congress=1086

Russell v. United States=1086

Notes and Questions=1089

2. Trespass, Disorderly Conduct, Threatening the President, and Desecrating the American Flag=1090

People v. Harrison=1090

Notes and Questions=1094

Hess v. Indiana=1095

Notes and Questions=1097

3. Conspiracy and Related Offenses=1100

United States v. Salameh, et al.=1100

Notes and Questions=1104

4. Extraterritoriality=1109

D. Crimes Designed to Protect the State=1109

1. The Espionage Act=1109

Debs v. United States=1109

Notes and Questions=1111

2. Syndicalism=1111

Gitlow v. New York=1111

Notes and Questions=1115

3. Statutes Aimed at Communism=1116

Scales v. United States=1116

Dennis v. United States=1118

Notes and Questions=1122

4. Seditious Conspiracy in Violation of 18 U.S.C. §2384=1124

United States v. Rahman, et al.=1124

5. Material Support of Terrorism―18 U.S.C. §§2339, 2339A, 2339B=1130

Humanitarian Law Project v. Reno=1130

Notes and Questions=1134

United States v. Afshari=1135

Notes and Questions=1137

6. Executive Power to Detain Suspected Terrorists=1139

Hamdan v. Rumsfeld=1140

Notes and Questions=1153

Boumediene v. Bush=1155

Notes and Questions=1164

E. Non-Constitutional Defenses=1165

United States v. Lopez-Lima=1165

United States v. Alvarez-Machain=1168

APPENDIX―RELEVANT PROVISIONS OF THE UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION AND ITS AMENDMENTS=1175

INDEX=1179

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Moenssens (law, U. of Richmond and U. of Missouri at Kansas City), Bacigal, Ashdown, and Gershowitz provide first-year law students with a casebook on criminal law. It begins with general concepts of criminality and an outline of criminal procedure and focuses on cases dealing with criminal law developments in modern code states. Along with new contributing authors, this edition has new cases with modern themes and reworked chapters to be more accessible to students and teachers. The chapter on sex offenses and related problems has been revised and expanded, begins with data on the prevalence of sexual violence, adds cases like Commonwealth v. Berkowitz and In the Interest of MTS to explore the development of the law of acquaintance rape, and has new cases and materials on fraud inducement, withdrawn consent, the spousal exception, and the development of rape shield laws. The chapter on misappropriation and related property offenses has been revised to show how the law of theft developed from early common law to the modern day and has been expanded to include separate sections for crimes of larceny by trick, false pretenses, and embezzlement, along with new classic cases such as The King v. Pear and The King v. Bazeley and modern day decisions. It also has a new section on the consolidation of theft offenses explaining how jurisdictions have enacted statutes to simplify the law of theft. In the chapter on uncompleted criminal conduct and criminal combinations, the material on RICO liability has been shortened to make room for more on the law of attempt, accessoryship, and conspiracy. It includes more on how courts separate mere preparation from an actual attempt, adds classic cases like People v. Rizzo, and discusses questions like aborted drug purchases and attempts to manufacture methamphetamine. It has new cases on accessoryship and drug lookouts, and new materials and recent cases on Internet predators attempting to solicit undercover officers, and high school students disseminating child pornography. The chapter on insanity adds classic cases on tests for determining insanity (like Parsons and Durham), updated and expanded material on attempts to abolish or limit the insanity defense, and additional cases and notes on expert testimony. Notes and questions have been updated throughout, and problems have been expanded. Annotation ⓒ2013 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)