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Criminal Law CJ 220 Chapter 6

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Criminal Law CJ 220 Chapter 6 Uncompleted Crimes: Attempt, Conspiracy, and Solicitation Andrew Fulkerson, JD, PhD Southeast Missouri State University – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Criminal Law CJ 220 Chapter 6


1
Criminal Law CJ 220Chapter 6
  • Uncompleted Crimes
  • Attempt, Conspiracy, and
  • Solicitation
  • Andrew Fulkerson, JD, PhD
  • Southeast Missouri State University

2
Incomplete crimes (inchoate offenses)
  • Attempt (attempting to commit an offense)
  • Conspiracy (agreeing with another person to
    commit a crime)
  • Solicitation (encouraging someone to commit a
    crime)

3
Elements of Incomplete Crimes
  • Specific intent to commit a crime
  • Some acts toward completion of the crime
  • Punish incomplete crimes less severely than
    completed crimes

4
Attempt
  • Early common law maxim
  • "The will shall be taken for the deed."

5
Common Law Attempt Elements
  • Purpose
  • Substantial acts to carry out criminal purpose
  • Some injury

6
Common Law Attempt
  • English common law developed law of attempt in an
    effort to prevent criminal behavior. Threats
    were punished to stop violence.
  • By 19th century common law attempt was well
    defined.
  • All attempts to commit a felony or misdemeanor
    were punishable as misdemeanors.

7
Elements of Criminal Attempt
  • Intent to commit a specific crime
  • Act or acts to carry out the intent and
  • Failure to complete the crime

8
Attempt
  • Mens reaspecific intent to commit the crime

9
Attempt Mens Rea
  • People v. Kimball, 109 Mich.App. 273, 311 N.W.2d
    343 (1981)

10
Attempt Mens Rea
  • State v. Harrell, 811 So.2d 1015 (La.App. 2002)

11
Attempt
  • People v. Moreland, WL 459026, (Cal.App. 2 Dist.)

12
Attempt
  • Actus Reus
  • More than mere intent
  • Less that completed crime
  • Interruption
  • Extraneous (stroke of luck)
  • Internal (voluntary abandonment)

13
Attempt Actus reus
  • Criminal attempt does not require a completed
    crime
  • Preparation is not attempt

14
Tests to Distinguish Attempt From Preparation
  • Physical proximity test (nearness to completion)
  • Unequivacality (Probable desistance) test
  • Substantial steps, or the Model Penal Code test

15
Physical Proximity Test
  • Time
  • Space
  • Number of necessary acts remaining to complete
    the crime

16
Probable Desistance Test
  • Whether act in ordinary course of events would
    result in crime, but for timely interference.

17
Equivocality Test
  • When act can have no other purpose than
    committing the crime

18
Model Penal Code Approach Substantial Steps
  • Requires substantial steps toward completion of
    the crime
  • Acts that are strongly corroborative of the
    persons criminal purpose

19
Substantial Steps
  • Young v. State, 303 Md. 298, 493 A.2d 352 (1985)

20
Attempt
  • Commonwealth v. Gilliam, 273 Pa.Super. 586, 417
    A.2d 1203 (1980)

21
Attempt Actus Reus
  • People v. Rizzo, 158 N.E.2d 888 (N.Y.App. 1927)

22
Attempt Actus Reus
  • Commonwealth v. Peaslee, 59 N.E. 55 (Mass. 1901)

23
Criminal Law CJ 220Chapter 6
  • Uncompleted Crimes
  • Attempt, Conspiracy, and
  • Solicitation
  • Andrew Fulkerson, JD, PhD
  • Southeast Missouri State University

24
Legal and Factual Impossibility
  • Legal impossibility D intends to commit crime,
    and does everything possible to carry out the
    act. However, law does not prohibit the acts.
    Legally impossible to commit this crime.
  • Factual impossibility person intends to commit
    the crime, but an extraneous factor prevents the
    act.

25
Impossibility
  • State v. Damms,
  • 9 Wis.2d 183, 100 N.W.2d 592 (1960)

26
Impossibility
  • State v. Robins, 646 N.W.2d (Wis. 2002)

27
Impossibility
  • State v. Kordas, 528 N.W.2d 483 (Wis.1995)

28
Attempt
  • State v. Wagner, 528 N.W.2d 85 (Wis.App. 1995)

29
Abandonment
  • Voluntary abandonment- D changes his mind about
    the crime and ceases before completion.
  • It is an affirmative defense in some states,
    and Model Penal Code
  • Requires a voluntary and complete renunciation
    of the crime
  • Must not be caused by facts that make detection
    more likely

30
Abandonment
  • LeBarron v. State,
  • 32 Wis.2d 294, 145 N.W.2d 79 (1966)

31
Abandonment
  • People v. Johnson, 750 P.2d 72 (Colo. App. 1987)

32
Criminal Law CJ 220Chapter 6
  • Uncompleted Crimes
  • Attempt, Conspiracy, and
  • Solicitation
  • Andrew Fulkerson, JD, PhD
  • Southeast Missouri State University

33
Conspiracy
  • Common law conspiracy combination of two or
    more persons formed for the purpose of doing an
    unlawful act or a lawful act by unlawful means.
  • a partnership for criminal purpose Holmes

34
Conspiracy
  • elements
  • actus reus agreement
  • mens rea the purpose of achieving either
  • an unlawful objective, or
  • lawful objective by unlawful means

35
Conspiracy Actus reus
  • agreement
  • may be informal
  • includes giving aid
  • law uses vague definitions for this agreement
  • most jurisdictions require an overt act toward
    completion

36
Conspiracy
  • U.S. v. Garcia, 151 F.3d 1243 (9th Cir. 1998)

37
Conspiracy mens rea
  • Not clearly defined at common law, leaving courts
    to define
  • Purpose may be inferred from the circumstances

38
Conspiracy mens rea
  • Specific intent crime"
  • Intent to do what?
  • Intent to enter in agreement to commit crime,
  • or intent to achieve specific criminal objective?

39
Objective of the Conspiracy
  • Agreements to commit felonies (some states)
  • Agreements to commit any crime, misdemeanors or
    felonies.
  • Agreements to commit a lawful act by unlawful
    means.
  • Some courts have extended the term unlawful to
    include civil wrongs.
  • Example unfair trade practices
  • Model Penal Code attempts to limit conspiracy to
    agreements or combinations with criminal
    objectives.

40
Parties to Conspiracy
  • Common law and most jurisdictions require two
    or more parties to make a conspiracy. A group
    can do more harm than an individual.

41
Parties to Conspiracy
  • Crimes that include two or more
  • Whartons Rule requires one more person than
    the underlying crime to be a conspiracy.
  • Example bribery takes two persons. Conspiracy
    to commit bribery requires three persons.
  • Some jurisdictions and the Model Penal Code
    abolish this requirement.

42
Withdrawal From Conspiracy
  • Completely abandon the enterprise
  • Withdraw all support
  • Give notice of withdrawal to co-conspirators
  • Some jurisdictions (Missouri) require the
    co-conspirator to renounce crime and prevent the
    crime from occurring.

43
Solicitation
  • Common law definition a
  • command, urging or request to
  • another person to commit a crime.
  • Even if the other person refuses, it
  • is a solicitation.

44
Actus reus of solicitation
  • Words which provide an inducement to crime
  • Simple approval of crime not enough
  • The solicitation need not be directed to a
    specific person

45
Mens rea of criminal solicitation
  • purpose or specific intent
  • Attempt to conspire

46
Solicitation
  • State v. Cotton, 790 P.2d 1050 (N/M.App. 1990)

47
Solicitation
  • Ganeson v. State, 45 S.W.3d 197 (Tex. 2001)
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