Criminal
Law
Essential
Elements of Crime
Actus
Reus = Act or Omission
·
Things that
are NOT “Acts”:
o
(1) Conduct
that is not the product of one’s own volition (i.e. someone pushing you)
o
(2) A reflexive or convulsive act (e.g. an epileptic seizure)
o
(3) An act
performed while unconscious or asleep (i.e. sleepwalking, not driving while sleeping)
·
원칙: Generally
there is no duty to act/rescue. Situations
where there are Legal Duties to Act arise:
o
(1) by Statute
(i.e. to pay taxes)
o
(2) by Contract
(e.g. lifeguard, nurse, etc)
o
(3) by Nature
of Relationship (parent-child, spouse-spouse, ship captain to crew, employer-ee)
o
(4) Where the
person voluntarily accepts a duty of care by acting, but then fails
to fully perform the act (i.e. D swims out to save drowning man, realizes
he dislikes the man, and decides not to save)
o
(5) Where the
person’s conduct created the peril.
Mens Rea = Mental State (** 8-10 MBE questions in this area)
·
Four Mental
states: (1) Specific Intent, (2)
Malice, (3) General Intent, (4) Strict Liability
·
Specific Intent. (“intentionally,”
“purposefully,” “willfully”)
o
Specific
intent crimes qualify for the additional defenses of (i) voluntary
intoxication and (ii) any mistake of fact.
o
Specific
Intent Crimes:
§ Inchoate Crimes of Solicitation, Conspiracy, and
Attempt
§ First degree murder [* not general “murder” which is 2nd
degree]
§ Attempted-Battery Assault [* not
“Threat” assault]
§ Common law felonies against property: Larceny, Embezzlement, False
Pretenses, Forgery
§ Robbery
§ Burglary
·
Malice. (“recklessly” “wantonly”) Similar to
specific intent, but includes a reckless
disregard of an obvious or high risk.
o
ONLY includes Murder
(2nd degree) and Arson.
·
General Intent. (“knowingly”) Catch-all Category. Most crimes are general intent
o
Includes
everything that is not specific intent, malice, or strict liability
o
Arson, Rape,
Battery, Indecent Exposure, Involuntary Manslaughter, “Depraved heart” murder
·
Strict Liability.
o
No-intent
crimes. Any defense that negates
intent is not a defense to a strict liability crime
o
Formula for SL
= Crime is in the administrative, regulatory or morality area, and there
are no adverbs (in the statute) describing the required mental
state
Special Case: Transferred
Intent (on 2/3 of all bar exams)
·
원칙: Intent
to perform a crime at one target is transferred to the inadvertent victim.
·
E.g. If D aims
to shoot and kill T, but misses and kills V, then D is still guilty of the
murder of V and is also guilty of the attempted murder of T. Attempt does not merge with the crime
here because T and V are different victims
Jurisdiction
& Merger
·
Jurisdiction
over a criminal matter is at the “legal
situs” of the crime (a State)
o
Legal Situs =
(i) where the conduct constituting the crime occurred, and/or (ii) where
the result of the crime occurred, OR (iii) for crimes of omission,
where the act should have been performed
o
Ex: If D is in NJ an difres a bullet
towards NY, killing B in NY, jurisdiction is in both NJ and NY.
·
Merger. Generally there is no merger of crimes
o
Merger applies
only to Solicitation and Attempt.
§ Thus a complete defense to attempt is that you
actually completed the crime.
o
Conspiracy
does NOT merge with the substantive offense; You can be guilty of conspiring to
do something and actually doing it
Accomplice
Liability
·
원칙: Accomplices are liable for the crime
itself AND for all other foreseeable crimes.
·
What are
Accomplices?
o
Accomplices
must actively be aiding, abetting, or counseling in the crime
o
* Mere presence
of a person is not enough to give rise to accomplice liability
·
Withdrawal
o
If the
accomplice only encouraged the crime, then he may withdraw by repudiation.
o
If the
accomplice participated in the crime, he may withdraw only by attempting
to neutralize his assistance
NY
Distinction
· An accomplice cannot benefit from the principal’s
defenses that go to negate mental state (i.e. insanity)
· An accomplice is not absolved from liability
even if the principal is acquitted, immune, or not prosecuted
· A person cannot be convicted solely on the basis of
uncorroborated accomplice testimony
Defenses
of Incapacity
Intoxication
·
Involuntary
intoxication is a defense to ALL crimes (including strict liability
crimes)
·
Voluntary
intoxication is only a
defense to crimes of specific intent.
o
i.e. voluntary
intoxication is a defense to first-degree murder, but not “murder.”
Insanity
·
Insanity is a
defense to ALL crimes (including Strict Liability crimes)
·
Four standards
of criminal insanity:
o
(1) M’Naghten
Test: At the time of the conduct,
D does not know right from wrong or does not understand the nature
and quality of his actions
o
(2)
Irresistible Impulse. D lacks all
self-control and self-choice.
o
(3) Durham
Test. D’s conduct was a product of
mental illness. But-for the mental illness, D would not
have engaged in such conduct
o
(4) ALI/MPC Test. D lacked the capacity to conform
his conduct to the requirements of law.
NY
Test for Insanity (similar to M’Naghten Test):
· A person is not criminally responsible for conduct,
if, at the time of the conduct, as a result of mental disease or defect, he lacked
capacity to know or appreciate either the nature and consequences of
such conduct, or that such conduct
was wrong.
Infancy
·
Under 7—NO
criminal liability
·
Under 14—Rebuttable
presumption of No criminal liability
NY
Distinction:
· Under 7:
NO criminal liability
· Under 16:
Subject to family court jurisdiction as a juvenile delinquent except:
· 13-15 may be prosecuted for 2nd degree
murder
· 14-15 responsible for serious offenses against
persons and property
Additional
Defenses
Self-Defense
/ Defense of a Dwelling
·
(1)
Self-Defense.
o
Non-Deadly Force. A victim may use non-deadly
force if he reasonably believes
that force is about to be used on him
o
Deadly Force.
Majority Rule: A victim may use deadly force if he reasonably believes that deadly
force is about to be used on him.
§
NY Rule
(Minority): A victim must retreat (if safe to do so)
before using deadly force.
Exceptions:
(i) no duty to retreat from your own home
(ii) no duty to retreat if the victim is being
robbed or raped, and
(iii) duty to retreat does not apply to police
officers
o
An Original Aggressor has NO self-defense
argument unless he (i) withdraws, and (ii) communicates such
withdrawal to the original victim.
·
(2) Defense of
a Dwelling.
o
A person may
NEVER use deadly force solely
to defend his property (i.e. no spring-guns)
Entrapment
·
Entrapment is
an affirmative defense to ALL crimes.
·
Narrowly
Construed.
·
Elements of
Entrapment:
o
(1) D must be induced
to commit the crime solely by the acts of the police, and
o
(2) D must
have had no predisposition to commit the crime
·
If D had
predisposition to commit the offense, then the entrapment defense is
unavailable
Consent
of Victim
· Generally, the consent of the
victim is NEVER a defense.
Duress
·
Multistate
Rule: Duress is an affirmative
defense to all crimes except
homicide
o
E.g. Gun to
your head, D says, “You will rob the bank or I will kill you”
NY Distinctions
· Duress is an affirmative defense to all
crimes, including homicide
· Defenses
vs. Affirmative Defenses re: BOP
(1) Defenses = Infancy, Self-Defense
If D raises a defense, prosecutor bears
the burden of disproving the defense by reas. doubt.
(2) Affirmative Defenses = Duress, Entrapment,
Insanity
D must raise and bear burden of proving
affirmative defenses by a preponderance
of evid.
Mistake
of Fact
Mental State of Crime Charged
|
Application of Mistake of Fact Defense
|
Specific Intent
Malice & General
Intent
Strict Liability
|
Any mistake
Reasonable mistakes only
Never
|
·
Thus any
mistake of fact is valid to change 1st degree murder to 2nd
degree murder
Inchoate
(“Incomplete”) Offenses
Solicitation
·
Solicitation =
asking someone to commit a crime.
o
Elements: (i) inciting, advising, commanding, or
requesting another to commit a crime, and (ii) with the intent that the person
solicited commit the crime (specific
intent)
·
Solicitation
is a completed crime when the solicitor finishes asking.
·
* If the
person agrees to commit crime, then
the crime has become only conspiracy, (solicitation merges)
·
Ineffectual
Defenses: Factual impossibility is
not a defense
o
No defense
that the person solicited is not convicted of the offense
Conspiracy
·
Elements:
o
(1)
Agreement. Does NOT have to
be expressed—can be inferred from conduct. Various persons can be part of a conspiracy even if they do
not know each other.
o
(2) Intent to
enter the agreement
o
(3) Intent to
achieve the unlawful objectives of
the agreement
o
(4) [in a
majority of states] An overt act
§ Majority
(and NY): Conspiracy = Agreement +
Overt Act
·
Even the smallest
act or preparation is sufficient (i.e. showing up)
NY
Distinctions:
o NY requires an Overt Act
o NY takes the Unilateral Approach—a
conspirator may be convicted regardless
of whether the other parties intended to pursue and achieve the unlawful
objective (i.e. you can conspire with undercover police)
·
Liability of
Co-Conspirators:
o
Each
co-conspirator is liable for ALL crimes committed by ANY of the
co-conspirators, if:
§ (i) the crime was committed in furtherance of the
conspiracy, and
§ (ii) the crime was foreseeable.
NY
Distinction:
o If a conspirator merely conspires and does not
participate in committing the offense, then that conspirator has NO
liability for the acts of co-conspirators.
·
Defenses to
conspiracy
o
Withdrawal.
§ Three requirements of withdrawal:
·
(1) D must notify
all co-conspirators of withdrawal
·
(2) D’s notice
must give co-conspirators time to abandon, and
·
(3) D must try
to neutralize any of his participatory acts
§ Withdrawal will NOT protect D from conspiracy
liability itself
·
Withdrawal
WILL protect D from (1) underlying unlawful crime/objective, or (2) co-conspirators’ subsequent
crimes in furtherance of the conspiracy
NY
Distinction:
§
Withdrawal is
an affirmative defense to the charge
of conspiracy
§
Effective
Withdrawal: (1) D must voluntarily
and completely renounce the conspiracy, and
(2) D’s efforts must prevent the commission of the crime
o
Impossibility.
Impossibility is NOT a defense to conspiracy
Attempt
·
Elements of
Attempt:
o
(1) An Overt
Act.
§ Overt Act = a substantial step beyond mere preparation in the
direction of the commission of the crime.
§ ** This is a much higher standard than the overt
act for conspiracy
o
(2) Intent to
commit a crime (specific intent)
o
(3) Failure to
commit that crime
·
Defenses:
o
Legal impossibility is a defense to attempt.
o
Factual impossibility and Abandonment are NOT
viable defenses to attempt.
Common
Law Crimes
Offenses
Against the Person
·
BATTERY. General
Intent (never strict liability). The unlawful application of force to another person,
resulting in either bodily injury or an offensive touching.
o
Battery = a completed
assault
·
ASSAULT. Two theories of Assault.
o
(1) Attempted
Battery Assault. Specific Intent
o
(2) Threat
Assault. General Intent
§
Threat assault
= creation of a reasonable apprehension of imminent bodily harm
·
HOMICIDE.
o
The victim
must be human and must be dead.
o
(1) Murder. Homicide = Murder if you can show one
of the following intents:
§
(a) Intent to
kill
§
(b) Intent to cause
serious bodily harm
§
(c) Intent to create
a highly reckless situation (e.g. Russian roulette)
§
(d) Intent to commit
a felony (felony murder)
§
[First Degree
Murder (majority) is (1) deliberate and premeditated or (2) felony
murder.]
NY Statutory Murder
§ NY First
Degree Murder (very limited) = Intentional + Special Circumstance
Special Circumstances:
- Intended victim was a police officer, judge,
witness or witness’s family member
- Murder for hire
- Intentional felony murder (BRAKES) of
non-participant
- Life sentence convict
- Torture murder
- Multiple murders as part of the same criminal
transaction
- Serial murder
§ NY Second
Degree Murder. Three Types
(1) Intentional murder (w/o special circumstance)
(2) Highly Reckless murder
(3) Felony murder (BRAKES)
o
(2) Felony Murder.
§
Qualifying
felony = BRAKES, or any felony which is inherently
dangerous
§
Requirements
of Felony Murder
·
(a) Underlying
felony must be independent and distinct from the homicide
·
(b) Homicide
was not foreseeable
·
(c) Homicides committed
while fleeing from the scene of the underlying felony DO constitute
felony murder
o
Exception: if D reaches a point of temporary safety (e.g. spends a night at home) and then
subsequently commits a homicide)
§
Defenses to
Felony Murder
·
(a) Any
defense to the underlying
felony is also a defense to felony murder
·
(b) Person who
dies is a co-felon, who died at the hands of a resisting victim or
police officer.
o
E.g. Slick
& Joe hold up a store. Owner
resists and shoots and kills Joe.
Slick is not liable for felony
murder of Joe. But if the owner
shoots but instead kills a customer, Slick and Joe are liable for felony murder.
NY Felony Murder
Ø Qualifying Felonies: Burglary,
Robbery, Arson, Kidnapping, Escape, or Sex crime
Ø ** D may be convicted
even if the underlying felony charge is dismissed
Ø Defense to FM (D must
prove all four elements)
(1)
D did not commit or aid in the commission of the homicidal act
(2)
D was not armed
(3)
D did not reasonable believe that his co-felons were armed,
and
(4)
D did not reasonably believe that any other participant intended
to engage in conduct likely to result in death or serious bodily injury.
|
o
(3)
Manslaughter. Two types of manslaughter.
§
Voluntary
Manslaughter = Provoked killing.
·
Elements of
Provocation:
o
(i) Sudden and
intense passion,
o
(ii) D lost
control
o
(iii)
Insufficient time for D to cool off, and
o
(iv) D in
fact did not cool off
§
Involuntary
Manslaughter.
·
(A) Death
resulting from criminal (gross)
negligence (e.g. sleeping while driving)
·
(B) Misdemeanor manslaughter. Death results while committing a
misdemeanor or an “un-enumerated” felony (i.e. a non-felony murder felony)
NY
Manslaughter
First Degree Manslaughter — Intent
to do serious bodily injury or CL voluntary manslaughter
Second Degree Manslaughter— Death resulting from recklessness
Criminally Negligent Homicide —
Ø
Death
resulting from a failure to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk
of death
Ø
D’s conduct
must be culpable, and death-producing event must
be foreseeable
Ø
Typical case
of negligent homicide is vehicular.
|
·
FALSE IMPRISONMENT.
o
Elements = (i)
unlawful confinement, (ii) without victim’s valid consent, (iii) with general intent
·
KIDNAPPING.
(i.e. Abduction)
o
Elements = (i)
unlawful confinement, AND (ii) movement of the victim or concealment of victim
NY
Kidnapping
* Both degrees of
kidnapping qualify for felony murder in NY
Ø First
Degree Kidnapping — Abduction + Special Circumstance.
n
Special
Circumstance: i) holding for ransom; ii) restraint w/
intent to inflict physical injury; or iii)
the victim dies
Ø
Second Degree Kidnapping —
Abductions w/o Special Circumstances
|
·
RAPE. Even the slightest penetration completes the crime of rape.
·
STATUTORY RAPE. This is a strict
liability crime.
o
No defense for
mistake of fact (age), voluntary intoxication, or consent
**
Property Offenses **
·
LARCENY.
* Larceny relates to possession, not title.
o
Elements:
§
(i) Wrongful
taking, i.e. stealing (by trespass or trick)
§
(ii) carry
the item away (any slight
carrying away is sufficient)
§
(iii) the personal
property of another
§
(iv) without
consent of the owner
§
(v) with intend (at the time of taking) to permanently deprive the owner of
possession
o
주의: Taking property in the belief that it is yours or that
you have rights to it is NOT larceny.
·
EMBEZZLEMENT.
o
Elements: (1) D has lawful possession, and
(2) D effectuates an unlawful conversion
o
Embezzler does
not have to benefit herself
o
No “carrying away”
is needed
o
* Embezzlement
involves possession, not title
·
FALSE PRETENSES (REPRESENTATION).
Elements:
o
(1) D
persuades owner to convey title (not
mere possession)
o
(2) D uses false
pretenses/misrepresentations to persuade the owner
§
Must be past or present facts, not future
predictions
·
ROBBERY. Robbery
= Larceny + Assault
o
Larceny +
Assault = Forcibly stealing property
o
Must show larceny
elements above
o
Assault
element—either:
§
(1) D takes
property by violence or fear from the person or his presence; OR
§
(2) There is a
threat of imminent harm (i.e. “your money or your life”)
o
Threat of future harm is extortion, not robbery
NY
Robbery
First Degree Robbery = forcibly stealing property + “Armed with a deadly weapon AND causing serious physical injury”
Second Degree Robbery = forcibly stealing property + ONE aggravating
factor (Aided by another; Causing
physical injury; OR Displaying a Firearm)
Third Degree Robbery = generally forcibly stealing property
|
·
EXTORTION. Blackmail.
o
Two
distinctions from Robbery:
§
No
“person/presence” requirement
§
Threatens only
future harm, not imminent harm (e.g. “Give
me $20M, or I will…”)
Offenses
Against the Home/Habitation
·
BURGLARY. Elements of CL Burglary:
o
(i) Breaking
§
Can be Actual
or Constructive “breaking”
·
Actual =
involving some force, however slight (e.g. opening an interior door)
·
Constructive =
by threats or fraud (i.e. unauthorized use of house keys by maid
§
No “breaking”
if D walks through a wide open door or window.
o
(ii) and Entering (Occurs as soon as any part of the body crosses the plane into the dwelling)
o
(iii) into a Dwelling
house of Another (Must be a dwelling, and not a
commercial building or barn)
o
(iv) at
Nighttime
o
(v) with the intent
(at the time of the breaking and entering) to commit a felony inside
NY
Burglary
Third Degree Burglary.
(i) Breaking (ii) entering (or remaining behind inside) of
(iii) any structure, (iv) at any time of day, (iv) with
the intent at the time of breaking/entering to commit any crime inside.
Second Degree Burglary = Third degree burglary + ONE of the
following aggravating factors:
(1) Structure is a dwelling
(2) Results in physical injury to a non-participant
(3) Burglar was armed
First Degree Burglary = Third degree Burglary + Structure is a
Dwelling + ONE of the following aggravating factors:
(1) Results in physical injury to a non-participant,
or
(2) Burglar was armed.
|
·
ARSON
o
Elements: (i) Malicious (ii) burning (iii)
of a dwelling of another
o
Burning =
“Material wasting of fiber or structure of the building by fire”
§
Carpet or
furniture catching fire is insufficient—must
actual damage the building itself
§
Does not apply
to smoke damage, water damage, or explosions
o
* Burning your
own home is not arson since CL required the house to be
“of another”
NY
Arson
Ø
Covers
fires, as well as smoke damage, water damage, and explosions
Ø
Applies to
any structure or motor vehicle, not just homes
Ø
Applies to
the arsonist’s own dwelling
|
Criminal
Procedure
Exclusionary
Rule
·
The ER is a
remedy based on the U.S. Constitution.
·
Products of
illegal searches/seizures or coerced statements are excluded
·
Limitations to the ER
o
Search/seizure
must violate the U.S. constitution or a federal statute in order
to qualify for exclusion under ER
o
May use ALL
otherwise excluded evidence (illegally obtained) to impeach D’s credibility during testimony at trial
§
Applies only to impeaching D, not to any other
defense witnesses
o
ER does not
apply to the conduct of grand juries
§
A grand jury
may compel witnesses to testify based on illegally obtained evidence
o
ER is not
available in civil proceedings or in parole revocation proceedings
·
Good Faith Defenses (Used by Police)
o
(1) Police
relied in good faith on a judicial opinion later changed by another judicial
opinion
o
(2) Police
relied in good faith on a statute or ordinance later declared unconstitutional
o
(3) Police
relied in good faith on a defective search warrant
NY Distinction:
§ NY does not recognize the good faith
reliance defense on a defective search warrant
·
Harmless Error Test: Even
if illegal evidence is admitted, the conviction will stand so long as
the prosecution can show beyond a reasonable doubt that the admission was
harmless
Fruit of the Poisonous Tree (FOPT)
·
All evidence
which is obtained or derived from exploiting illegal evidence is
likewise excluded
·
Exceptions to
FOPT (i.e. breaking the chain
between original police illegality and the evidence):
o
(1) Independent
source of the evidence
o
(2) Inevitable
discovery of the evidence (i.e. body lying on side of a well-traveled road)
o
(3) Intervening
acts of free will on the part of D: e.g. D is
arrested illegally on Friday.
Saturday he gets out on bail.
Monday he comes back to the station voluntarily to give a confession. Confession may be admitted.
Fourth
Amendment Protections
Detentions: Stops & Arrests
·
Stop & Frisk. Stop must be
made based on reasonable suspicion
o
Frisk must be
based on a reasonable suspicion that the detainee is armed and dangerous.
o
Detention may
be no longer than necessary to verify suspicion
·
Automobile Stops. Must be based
on reasonable suspicion
o
Exception: roadblocks for sobriety tests, seat
belts, etc.
·
Arrests. Must be made based on probable cause
o
Arrest
warrants are generally not required
before arresting someone in a public
place.
o
Arrest
warrants generally are required for non-emergency
arrests at an individual’s own home
·
Station House Detentions.
o
Must have probable
cause to detain and bring to the station for either (1) fingerprinting, or (2) interrogation.
NY Arrests—SLIDING
SCALE of Police Authority (increasing intrusion)
I. Request
for Information
(1) Police can approach and request information
except on “whim or caprice.”
(2) Individuals have the right to not respond, and
even to run away—those acts do not give police probable cause to arrest.
II. CL
Right to Inquire
(1) If police have “founded suspicion that criminal
activity is afoot,” they can ask questions and briefly detain.
(2) Police must release following explanations
III. Forcible
Stop / Detention / Frisk
(1) If police have a reasonable suspicion that
the individual has committed or is committing a crime, then police may frisk
for weapons IF they reasonably
believe the suspect is armed.
(2) Warrantless seizure of anything reasonably
believed to be a weapon is OK.
IV. Police
Pursuit
(1) Must be based on reasonable suspicion that
a crime has been, is being, or is about to be committed
V. Arrest
(1) Police must have probable cause to believe
the individual has committed a crime.
|
** Evidentiary
Search & Seizure **
·
8 out
of 13 MBE questions will be in this area; Important for NY essays too.
Was the Search/Seizure performed by a government agent?
|
® No ®
|
Search is not challengable under Fourth Amendment
|
||
¯
Yes
¯
|
||||
Did the search violate D's REOP?
|
® No ®
|
|||
¯
Yes
¯
|
||||
Did government agent have a warrant?
|
® No ®
|
Was it a Wiretapping or Eavesdropping Situation? If so, it requires a warrant
Was the search within a warrantless search exception?
1.
Incident to lawful arrest
2.
Automobile search
3.
Plain view
4.
Consent
5.
Stop and frisk
6.
Hot pursuit and evanescent evidence
|
||
¯
Yes
¯
|
® Yes ®
|
Search is valid under Fourth Amendment
|
||
Was the warrant proper (i.e., based on probable
cause, precise on its face, and issued by a neutral and detached magistrate) or
was the government agent's reliance on the warrant in good faith?
|
® No ®
|
|||
¯
Yes
¯
|
||||
Was the warrant properly executed?
1.
Without unreasonable delay
2.
After announcement (unless officers or
evidence would be endangered)
3.
Person or place searched or seized within
scope of warrant
|
® No ®
|
® No ®
|
Search is invalid under Fourth Amendment
|
|
¯
Yes
¯
|
||||
Search is valid under 4th Amendment
|
STEP 1: Does D have a 4th Amendment Right?
·
(A)
Search/Seizure must be conducted by a Government Agent. Government Agents include:
o
Publicly paid
police (on or off duty)
o
Any private
individual acting at the direction of
the police
o
Any privately
paid security or law enforcement officer who has been deputized with the power to arrest.
·
(B) D must
have Standing to challenge the search/seizure
o
Three
categories of automatic standing, where D always has standing to
challenge: (OLG)
§
(1) D is the Owner of the premises searched
§
(2) D Lives
on the premises searched, regardless of ownership
§
(3) D is an overnight Guest of the owner of the premises searched
o
Two categories
where standing is sometimes granted: (SL)
§
(1) D is the owner of the property Seized
§
(2) D was Legitimately present when the illegal search took place
o
* Hot Standing
topics = NO
STANDING: (PD)
§
A Passenger in a car, who does not own car or property seized has no standing
§
A Drug dealer who is briefly on a premises (owned by someone else) solely for the
business of cutting drugs for sale has no standing
NY
Distinction — Co-defendants
traveling in a car are permitted automatic
standing to challenge charges of criminal possession of a weapon which
arises solely because of the presumption of possession to all passengers when
weapons are found in a vehicle
|
·
(C) D must
have a Reasonable Expectation of Privacy (REOP) in the confiscated
evidence
o
There is no
REOP where the item is of “Public”
Nature.
o
There is no
REOP and no right to privacy in:
§
1) Sound of your voice;
§
2) Your handwriting;
§
3) Paint on the outside of your
car
§
4) Bank account records;
§
5) Monitoring of your car on public streets or in
driveway
§
6) Anything that can be seen
across an open field;
§
7) Garbage set out for collection
§
8) Anything that can be seen from open
airspace;
§
9) Odors emanating from
luggage
STEP
2: If there was a search
warrant—Was the warrant Valid?
·
à Recall: Police may rely
on the validity of a warrant in good faith (exception to exclusionary rule)
·
(A) Probable Cause. A warrant must be issued upon a showing
of probable cause
NY Use of Informants
o If a warrant is based in part on an informer’s tip,
then the affidavit underlying the warrant must show (i) how the informer
got his information, and (ii) establish reliability and credibility of
the informer.
·
(B) Precision. A warrant must be precise on its face, by stating
with particularity the place to be searched and the items
to be seized
o
* Special
rules for wiretapping / eavesdropping warrants (below)
·
(C) Judicial Official. Warrant must have been issued by a neutral
and detached official
o
Neutral =
neutral from law enforcement
o
Officials who
are not neutral: State Attorney General,
Magistrate judge whose compensation is based solely on number of warrants
issued.
o
Court clerks are
neutral
STEP
3: If No warrant or Invalid
warrant, Does a Warrant Exception to Search apply?
- search incident to lawful arrest
- Automobile exception
- Plain view
- consent
- stop and frisk
- Hot pursuit and evanescent evidence
·
(1) Search Incident to Lawful Arrest
o
Requirements
of a Search Incident to a Lawful Arrest:
§
(i) Arrest
must be lawful (i.e. with probable cause)
§
(ii) Search
must be contemporaneous in time and place with the arrest, and
§
(iii) Search
must be within the wingspan (geographic scope) of the detainee
o
Searches of Automobiles
incident to arrest:
§
With any
lawful arrest in a car, the police may search the entire interior compartment of the car and everything in
it, but NOT the trunk.
§
Above rule
applies even if the arrested person is handcuffed
NY Distinction:
-
A search incident to a lawful arrest in general: Police must suspect that the
arrested person may be armed in order to search containers within the “wingspan”
-
Search of Automobile Incident to Arrest: Once the occupant has been removed from
the car, the police may not remove closed containers or bags to look for
weapons or other evidence
·
(2) Automobile Exception
o
If the police
have probable cause to believe that a car contains contraband or
the fruits of a crime, then the police may search the entire car. [This is very narrow]
§
* Police may
search any container, package, luggage, or trunk that could reasonably
contain the sought contraband/fruits of crime.
§
There need not
be any arrest here
o
Timing
of probable cause
§
à Probable cause may arise after car is stopped, but must
arise before any search
·
(3) Plain View
o
The officer must be
§
1) legitimately
present in the premises
§
2) discover items
§
3) see evidence in plain view
without any effort
§
4) Have probable cause to believe that the item
is evidence, contraband, fruit or instrumentalities of crime.
·
(4) Consent Searches
o
Consent must
be voluntary AND intelligent
o
Settled Rules:
§
(i) No
valid consent where the police misrepresent that they have a warrant
§
(ii) Police
have no duty to warn that you have a right to refuse consent
§
(iii) Where
two or more persons have equal right to use the premises or property, then any one
of them may consent to the search of the premises or property
·
(5) Stop & Frisk
o
Police must
have reasonable suspicion to stop you.
o
Must have a reasonable
suspicion that you are armed in order to frisk you.
o
Police may
seize weapons OR contraband that feel like it from the outside
§
Such items
will always be admissible so long as
the original stop was reasonable.
·
(6) Hot Pursuit & Evanescent Evidence
o
Hot Pursuit of a fleeing felon.
§
Must be within
15 minutes behind the felon (or closer).
§
Once hot
pursuit requirement is satisfied, all
other search limitations are negated—there is no wingspan limitation, they
may search the entire home and get anything in the home (even something
in the basement)
o
Evanescent Evidence
§
Police may
take evidence which may not be available if the police took the time to get
a valid warrant
§
E.g. blood
alcohol tests, scrapings under fingernails
o
Cf., Exigent Circumstances
§
All warrantless search and seizure in a person’s home are unreasonable
unless exigent situation exists.
STEP 4: Wiretapping and Eavesdropping ALWAYS require Warrants
·
Special rules
for Wiretapping and Eavesdropping:
o
(1) Warrant
requirements
§
Requires
probable cause
§
* Must name
the persons to be overheard, particular description of target
conversations, be of a short time limit, wiretap must terminate
once target information is obtained
§
Police must return
to court to show the intercepted conversations
o
(2) Unreliable Ear Exception. Everyone assumes the risk that the
other person in a conversation is wired or has consented to government
monitoring.
Miranda
& Confessions
Miranda
Rights
·
Police must
issue Miranda warnings to any person subject to police custodial interrogation
·
Elements of
Custodial Interrogation:
o
(i) Custody = Not free to Leave.
§
Things that
are not custodial:
probation interviews and routine traffic stops
§
If an
individual is not in custody, then the police can ask any questions
without giving Miranda warnings
o
(ii) Interrogation = Any
conduct (not just direct questioning) where police knew or should have
known would elicit a damaging statement
§
“Blurts” and
other spontaneous statements are admissible without Miranda warnings.
·
à No negative implication may be drawn by the Prosecutor against
a D who exercises his right to remain silent upon hearing Miranda Rights. (Unconstitutional to do so)
·
Waiver
of Miranda Rights.
o
After issuing
Miranda rights, police must obtain a waiver from D before continuing
interrogation
o
Waiver = voluntary + intelligent + knowing.
§
Silence and
shoulder shrugging are NOT effective waivers
NY Distinction:
O If the police know or have
reason to know that D is represented by an attorney for the present charge, then waiver may only be obtained from D in the presence of counsel.
|
Right
to Counsel (5th Amendment)
·
If (after
Miranda warnings) D requests the right to counsel, then police may NOT
reinitiate interrogation without the attorney present.
·
5th
Amendment right to counsel only relates to custodial
interrogation
·
It is NOT offense specific like
the 6th amendment right to counsel.
5th Amendment
Right to Counsel NY Distinctions : *** VERY
Commonly Tested ***
• NY provides greater
protection to the D than does the U.S. Constitution
• NY provides an indelible right to counsel.
• This indelible right attaches:
(i)
When D
is in custody, police are doing things
overwhelming the layperson AND D requests counsel
(ii)
At arraignment
(iii)
Upon the
filing of an accusatory instrument
(iv)
Where
there has been any significant
judicial activity, OR
(v)
If
investigating officials know (or should know) that D is represented by
counsel in present charge
• A waiver may be obtained from criminal D who is actually and
known to be represented by an attorney, only
if counsel is present
• Investigatory lineups: No right to counsel
exists at an investigatory lineup which is held prior to formal prosecutorial
action, except
(i)
police are aware that D is represented by counsel on another case; and
(ii)
D explicitly requests his attorney
|
Constitutional
Rights & Privileges
6th
Amendment Right to Counsel
·
Attaches after
formal charges have been filed
·
6th
amendment right is offense specific
o
Attorney must
be present when D is being questioned about the specific offense that
the attorney represents D for
·
Ineffective Assistance of Counsel (Likely NY
essay question)
o
D must show:
§
(1) Counsel’s
conduct was unreasonable (deficient performance), and
§
(2) Reasonable
probability that counsel’s conduct affected the outcome of the case (actual
prejudice in the result of the case)
o
TIP: D’s argument is likely to fail.
5th
Amendment Privilege Against Compelled Self-Incrimination
·
Privilege may
be asserted by anyone (witness, party, etc) in any case or proceeding.
o
Prosecution
cannot draw negative implications as to D’s failure to testify (or to
remain silent upon hearing Miranda warnings). Do not want to chill rights.
·
Protects testimonial evidence.
o
Does not
protect against physical evidence (hair, blood, urine)
·
Situations
where there is NO Privilege:
o
(1) Grant of Immunity.
§
A witness may
be compelled to answer questions if granted adequate immunity for
prosecution.
§
“Use and
Derivative Use” Immunity is sufficient—i.e. the prosecution will not use
immunized testimony, or anything derived from it, to prosecute you.
·
* But, for Use
and Derivative Use immunity, prosecution can prosecute you based on evidence
obtained before immunity was granted.
§
* Note: Immunity extends only to offenses to
which the question relates, and does not protect against perjury
committed during the immunized testimony.
NY Distinction:
NY Grants transactional immunity,
which is broader than “use” immunity
|
o
(2) No Possibility of Incrimination.
(e.g. statute of limitations has run)
o
(3) Waiver.
§
By testifying
in the first instance, a criminal D waives his 5th
amendment privilege on all legitimate subjects
§
D must assert
his privilege the first time asked under oath—otherwise you have waived
the privilege for all subsequent criminal prosecutions
Pre-Trial
Procedures
Bail
·
Bail issues
are immediately appealable.
·
Preventative
detention is constitutional
Competency
to Stand Trial
·
Two standards
to measure D’s competency to stand
trial:
o
(1) D lacks
a rational as well as factual understanding of the charges and
proceedings, or
o
(2) D lacks
sufficient present ability to consult with his lawyer with a
reasonable degree of understanding.
Pre-Trial
Identifications
·
Rationale: Pre-trial identifications are a quick
check that witness remembers D from the crime
itself
·
Substantive Attacks on Pre-Trial Identification
o
(1) Right to Counsel.
§
Post-Charge lineups and show-ups (one-on-one IDs) give rise to a right to counsel
§
NO right to counsel if police are showing victim photos of
suspects
NY Distinction:
-
No right to counsel exists at an
investigatory lineup held prior to
formal charges, except when
(i)
police are aware that D is represented by counsel on another
charge, and
(ii)
D explicitly requests his attorney
-
Police must notify counsel and provide an
opportunity for counsel to appear before they proceed with the lineup.
|
o
(2) Due Process.
§
If the line-up
or show-up is too suggestive
(substantively likely to produce a misidentification), then D has been denied
DP.
·
Remedy for Defective Pre-Trial ID Procedure
o
Remedy =
exclusion of both pre-trial and
in-court identifications.
o
* Exception: If prosecution can show
an independent source of identification, then in-court
identification is permissible (despite
violations of right to counsel or DP)
§
e.g. witness
had ample time and opportunity to look at D at the time of the crime
Grand
Juries
NY Rules on Grand Juries:
• GJ’s
consist of 16-23 people (12 must agree to indict)
• A
witness who has been granted immunity may
consult with counsel, but not in
the grand jury room;
• cf., A witness who has waived immunity may be accompanied by counsel in the grand jury
room
• GJ
indictment must be based on legally
sufficient evidence (evidence admissible at a trial)
• All witnesses testifying before the GJ
receive automatic transactional
immunity (cannot be prosecuted for any transaction which he testifies to
(unless waived)
• If D requests, D may testify before the
grand jury, so long as he waives
transactional immunity
|
Prosecutorial
Duty to Disclose Exculpatory Information and Notice of Defenses
NY Rule on Prosecutorial
Duties to Disclose
• NY
specifically provides that, upon demand, D may obtain materials from P for
inspection and copying
• D may
obtain the “Rosario Materials”:
-
His own or a co-defendant’s statement to the police, including grand jury
testimony
-
Tapes or bugged conversations intended to be used at trial
-
Relevant photos or drawings made by the police; Any other property
obtained from D
-
Reports of physical, mental or scientific tests or experiments
-
Approximate date, time, and place of the offense charged
-
Anything that the State or Federal constitution requires to be disclosed
to D by P prior to trial
-
All specific instances of D’s conduct that prosecutor intends to use at
trial to impeach D’s credibility
• Prosecutor
must give D any prior written or
recorded statements of persons to be called at witnesses, as well as
known criminal records of prosecution witnesses
• Timing of this disclosure: after jury is sworn in, but before
Prosecutor’s opening statement
• Failure
to produce “Rosario Materials” = reversal
of conviction IF D can show that the non-disclosure materially contributed to
the result of the trial (i.e. prejudice to the outcome)
|
NY Rules on Notice of
Defense
• D must
give notice to the Prosecution of alibi
and insanity defenses
• Insanity:
D must notify prosecutor of insanity defense within 30 days from a “not guilty” plea
• Alibi:
Prosecutor must demand D’s alibi within
20 days of arraignment, and D must
reply within 8 days
• Defendant Disclosure: Before D’s direct case, D must make
available any relevant prior written or recorded statements by defense
witnesses.
|
Trial
by Jury & Guilty Pleas
Right
to Trial by Jury
·
Which cases get a Right to Jury Trial? D gets
a right to jury trial if D is charged
with:
o
(i) An offense
where the maximum authorized sentence is greater than 6 months, or
o
(ii) Criminal
contempt, where the sum of sentences
is greater than 6 months.
o
* If the
maximum sentence is less than or equal to
6 months, then no right to jury trial
·
Number of
Jurors & Unanimity
o
Minimum 6 jurors. If 6 are used, they must
be unanimous
o
No
constitutional right to a unanimous 12-juror verdict (though some states
require it)
§
Constitution
has accepted 10-2 and 9-3 verdicts
·
Cross-Sectional
Requirement
o
D has a right
to a jury pool which reflects a fair
cross-section of the community, but D’s specific jury does not have
to reflect that cross-section
·
Preemptory
Challenges.
o
It is
unconstitutional for either the
prosecution or defense to exercise preemptory challenges to exclude from the
jury prospective jurors on account of race or gender
Guilty
Pleas & Plea Bargaining
·
Guilty Plea =
Waiver of the 6th amendment right to
jury trial
·
Basic Trends:
o
Supreme Court
will not disturb a guilty plea after sentencing (but see below)
o
Supreme Court
has adopted a contract theory of plea bargaining
·
Court Acceptance of Plea Bargains
o
Procedural
requirements of accepting the plea must be strictly followed, otherwise
D is allowed to withdraw his guilty plea.
o
Required
Procedure:
§
(1) Judge must
address the defendant directly / personally (not to D’s counsel)
§
(2) Remarks
must be on the record
§
(3) Judge must
inform D of:
·
(i) the nature
of the charge
·
(ii) the
maximum authorized and the mandatory minimum sentences, and
·
(iii) D’s right
to plead not guilty and proceed to trial
·
Withdrawing a Guilty Plea After Sentencing. Four methods:
o
(1)
Involuntariness of the plea. i.e.
attack procedure above
o
(2) Court’s lack
of jurisdiction over the case
o
(3) Ineffective
assistance of counsel (6th Amendment—unlikely to prevail)
o
(4) Failure
of prosecution to stick with an agreed-upon plea bargain (i.e. breach
of contract)
Sentencing
& Punishments
Sentencing
·
Sentencing
will occur immediately after a guilty plea / verdict
·
Re-Sentencing after a successful appeal
o
Generally, D
may not be given a harsher sentence on retrial after a successful appeal
o
Rationale: do not want to chill D’s right to an
appeal
Constitutionality
of the Death Penalty
·
Any death
penalty statute that does not give D a chance to present mitigating facts
and circumstances is unconstitutional
·
There can be
no automatic category for imposition of the death penalty
·
The State may
not, by statute, limit the mitigating factors—all mitigating
evidence must be admissible, or the statute is unconstitutional
·
Only a
jury, and not a judge, may
determine the aggravating factors justifying imposition of the death penalty
NY Distinction: NY court
of appeals has declared the death penalty unconstitutional; NY Legislature has
not acted to change that holding.
Double
Jeopardy (5th Amendment)
·
A person may
not be retried for the same offense by the same sovereign once
Jeopardy has attached.
o
(1) When Jeopardy attaches:
§
No jeopardy
attaches in civil proceedings (i.e. can be prosecuted for the crime of
tax fraud and be tried in a civil case to get the money back.
§
(i) Jury Trial: Jeopardy attaches when the jury is
sworn in.
§
(ii) Bench Trial: Jeopardy
attaches when the first witness is sworn in.
o
(2) Same Offenses.
§
Two crimes are
not the same offense if each crime requires proof of an additional
element that the other does not.
NY Distinction:
All criminal acts arising from a single
criminal transaction must be tried together
|
o
(3) Separate Sovereigns
§
States and the
Federal government, as different
sovereigns, may both try the same defendant for the same crime or
transaction.
§
Cf., State and its localities
are not different sovereigns
·
Exceptions to DJ rule—Situations permitting
retrial:
o
(1) Hung
juries
o
(2) Mistrials
for manifest necessity (e.g. D gets hospitalized/sick)
o
(3) Re-trial
after a successful appeal (i.e. a remand back to trial court)
o
(4) Breach by the Defendant, of an agreed-upon
plea agreement (plea and sentencing can be withdrawn an original charges
reinstated)
[이상의 outline은 본인이 작성한 것이 아님을 알려드립니다. 하지만, New York Bar Exam을 준비하는데 도움이 되리라 생각합니다.]
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