Title: CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND THE RULE OF LAW
1CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND THE RULE OF LAW
- Substantive Law
- Procedural Law
2Criminal Law and Tort (Civil) Law - Differences
- Tort Law
- Tort law is a civil or private wrong.
- Sanction is monetary damages.
- The individual brings the action.
- Criminal Law
- Crime is a public offense.
- Sanction is incarceration or death.
- Right of enforcement belongs to the state.
3Criminal Law and Tort (Civil) Law - Similarities
- Both seek to control behavior.
- Both impose sanctions.
- Similar areas of legal action exist
4Sources of Criminal Law
Common Law
Constitutional Law
Statutory Law
Administrative Law
5Common Law Origins
Formal law in the colonies was adopted from
existing English law, which today is known as
common law.
6Principles of Common Law
Actus Reus
Legality
Causation
Mens Rea
Harm
Concurrence
Punishment
7Elements of a Crime
- Actus Rea
- Mens Rea
- Attendant circumstances
- Burglary example
8Elements of a Crime - Burglary
A person is guilty of burglary if he enters a
building or occupied structure, or separate
secured or occupied portion thereof actus rea,
with intent to commit a crime therein mens rea,
unless the premises are at the time open to the
public or the actor is licensed or privileged to
enter attendant circumstances.
9Statutory Definitions of Crimes
- Statutory definition of crimes vary from state to
state - Statutory interpretation NYPC example
10Statutory Interpretation
A person is guilty of murder when Under
circumstances evincing a depraved indifference to
human life, he or she recklessly engages in
conduct that creates a grave risk of death to
another person, and thereby causes the death of
that person. New York Penal Code
11Fact Scenario for Statutory Interpretation
- The defendant, Smith, was drinking on a winter
evening with the victim, Jones. The bartender
says that Jones was in an intoxicated condition
and was flashing 100 bills when he left the bar
with Smith at about 9 pm. - Smith admits that he drove Jones out of town
robbed him took his clothes and glasses and
left him on a rural dirt road. The temperature
was near zero, and visibility was obscured by
blowing snow. - At about 10 pm Davis was traveling in his pickup
truck at approximately 50 mph. As he drove over a
rise in the road, he spotted a naked man standing
in the middle of the road, but didnt have time
to react before his truck struck Jones. The
coroner ruled that Jones died of a massive head
injury and that his blood alcohol level was proof
of a high degree of intoxication.
12Responsibility for Criminal Acts Affirmative
Defenses
- Entrapment
- Self-Defense
- Necessity
- Duress (Coercion)
- Immaturity
- Mistake
- Intoxication
- Insanity
13Insanity Defense
- Controversial
- Rarely used
- Varying rules
14Insanity Defense Rules
- MNaghten (1843) Didnt know what he was doing
or didnt know it was wrong - Irresistible Impulse (1897) Could not control
his conduct - Durham (1954) The criminal act was caused by
his mental illness - Model Penal Code (1972) Lacks substantial
capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his
conduct or to control it - Present Federal law Lacks capacity to
appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct
15State Standards for Insanity Defense
16Quick Quiz Criminal Law
- 1) ___ may be used with reasonable force to
protect against criminal attacks. - Self Defense
- 2) ___ is the body of rules that regulate conduct
between individuals in their relationships. - Civil law
- 3) ___ is the intent element of a crime
- Mens Rea
- 4) ___ is a defense when someone physically
forces someone else to commit a crime. - Duress (coercion)
- 5) ___ permits the assignment of criminal
responsibility without a showing of criminal
intent - Strict liability
- 6) ___ is the necessary relationship in criminal
law between an action and a harm - Causation
17Criminal Procedural Law
- Origins
- Bill of Rights
- 14th Amendment Due Process
- Incorporation
- 4th , 5th, 6th, and 8th amendment rights
18Magna Carta 13th Century England
Im being oppressed!! Youre oppressing me!!
19- Constitution (1787) didnt originally contain a
statement of rights - Bill of Rights(1st ten amendments) added later
(1791) - Criminal Justice primarily impacted by 4th,
5th, 6th, and 8th Amendments
20(No Transcript)
21William Rehnquist 1986-present
Earl Warren 1953-1969
Warren Burger 1969-1986
22Fourth Amendment Unreasonable Search Seizure
- What is unreasonable?
- Exclusionary rule
- Weeks (1914)
- Mapp (1961)
- Leon (1984)
23Fifth Amendment Self-Incrimination and Double
Jeopardy
- Self-Incrimination
- Miranda (1966)
- Double Jeopardy
- Separate sovereignty doctrine
- Also, right to grand jury and general due process
I should have paid attention in Yates class
24Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel and Fair Trial
- Right to Counsel
- Right to Trial by Jury
- Right to Confront Witnesses Against You
- Jury issues
25Eighth Amendment
- No excessive bail or fines
- Preventive detention is OK
- Forfeiture must be reasonable
- No cruel or unusual punishment Death Penalty
- 1972 Furman says its unconstitutional as applied
- 1976 Gregg says OK
- 1987 McCleskey says specific proof of racial bias
required - 2002 Atkins says execution of mentally retarded
unconstitutional
26Quick Quiz Criminal Procedure
- 1) ___ is the portion of the Constitution used by
the Supreme Court to apply rights against
infringement by states - Fourteenth Amendment
- 2) ___ is the process by which the Supreme Court
applied provisions of the Bill of Rights to the
states - Incorporation (doctrine)
- 3) ___ prevents the use of torture and mutilation
as punishment - Eighth Amendment (prohibiting cruel unusual
punishment) - 4) ___ provides a right against double jeopardy
- Fifth Amendment
- 5) ___ is the constitutional provision that seeks
to make people feel secure against unwarranted
intrusions into their homes and property - Fourth Amendment
- 6) ___ affects the evidence when police violate
defendants Constitutional rights - Exclusionary rule