Title: What is a
1What is a law?
- Norms are behavioral codes that guide people into
actions that conform to societal expectation - Folkways are everyday norms based on custom,
tradition, or etiquette (violate somebodys
personal space) - Mores are norms based on broad societal morals
(illegitimate childbearing) - Laws are norms supported by codified social
sanctions. BUT Mores and folkways have always
influenced the law
2Brief History of Law I
- 2000 BC Earliest Surviving Legal Codes
- 1750 BC Code of Hammurabi lex talionis
- Roman Twelve Tables 451 BC
- Dark Ages (500-1000 AD)
- Written codes were lost and superstitions and
fear of magic dominated thinking.
3Brief History of Law II
- Before the Norman Conquest (1060 AD), the legal
system in England was decentralized. - Power given to tithings, hundreds and shires.
- Several legal/court systems were active
- Wergild (compensation) was divided between the
King and victim.
4Development of Common Law
- Norman Conquest (1066 AD)
- William the Conqueror establishes royal court
- Stare decisis became the dominant standard
- English common law born during the reign of Henry
II (1154-1189) - Circuit Judges
- Royal Prosecutors and movement toward national
law - Development of Jury System
5Common Law v. Statutory Law
Common Law is judge-made law. The law is found in
previously decided cases.
Statutory Laws are derived from legislative acts
that decide the definition of the behavior that
is codified into law.
6Criminal and Tort Law
- Both seek to control behavior.
- Both impose sanctions (punishments)
- Similar areas of legal action exist e.g.,
- personal assaults
- white-collar offenses like environmentalpollution
7Criminal and Tort Law
- A public offense
- Enforcement is statebusiness
- Punishment is oftenloss of liberties or
sometimes death - Fines go to the state
- State doesnt ordinarily appeal
- Proof beyond a reasonable doubt
- A civil or private wrong
- Individuals bring action
- Sanction is normally monetary damages
- Both parties can appeal
- Individuals receives thecompensation for
harmdone - Preponderance of the evidence is required for a
decision.
8Classification of Crime
9Types of Crime
10Substantive vs. Procedural Law
- Substantive Law
- Written code that defines crimes and punishments
- Procedural Law
- Rules of the court, trials...
11Functions of the Criminal Law
12A criminal law must indicate a type of criminal
intent and the specific elements of a behavior
that are illegal.
- Actus Reas
- Physical act must be voluntary
- If crime isFailure to act, there must be legal
obligation. - Mens Rea
- General or specific intent
- Negligence
13Specific Criminal Defenses
- Deny the Actus Reas (I didnt do it)
- Deny the Mens Rea
- Ignorance / Mistake
- Intoxication?
- Insanity Defense
14The Dreaded INSANITY PLEA
- Insane in the Membrane?
- Insanity is a legal, not clinical term
- Different States have different insanity rules
- MNaghten Rule
- Irresistible Impulse Test
- Substantial Capacity Test
- Reality? Defense used in lt 1 of cases
- Successful in very few cases
- When successful?
15Other Specific Criminal Defenses
- Justifications Acknowledge actus reas and mens
rea, but - Necessity
- Duress
- Self-defense
- Entrapment
- Exotic Defenses (PMS, PTSSinsert your favorite
acronym here)