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CHAPTER 11 Defenses

CHAPTER 11 Defenses. Defenses.

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CHAPTER 11 Defenses

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  1. CHAPTER 11Defenses

  2. Defenses • To get a conviction in a criminal case, the prosecutor must estab beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed the act in question with the required intent. The defendant is not required to present a defense but can simply force the govt to prove its case. However, the defendant has a number of possible defenses.

  3. 3 Possible Defenses • 1. No Crime Has Been Committed: • The defendant may present evidence to show that (1) no crime was committed. Ex—defendant might attempt to show that he was carrying a gun but had a valid license. (2) that there was no criminal intent. Ex—the defendant mistakenly took another person’s coat when leaving the restaurant. Thus the defendant is innocent of larceny if it was an honest and reasonable mistake.

  4. Possible Defenses • 2. Defendant did not Commit the Crime: • Often there is no doubt that a crime has been committed but the question is, who committed it? Here the defendant may present evidence of a mistake in identity or may offer an alibi—evidence that the defendant was somewhere else at the time the crime was committed.

  5. Possible Defenses • 3. Defendant Committed a Criminal Act, but the Act was Excusable or Justified: • Defenses here include self-defense and defense of property and others. The law recognizes the right of a person unlawfully attacked to use reasonable force in self-defense. It also recognizes the right of 1 person to use reasonable force to defend another person from an attack that is about to occur.

  6. Limitations to these defenses • 1. A person who reasonable believes there is imminent danger of bodily harm can use a reasonable amount of force in self-defense. However, a person can’t use more force than appears to be necessary. If, after stopping an attacker, the defender continues to use force, the roles reverse, and the defender can no longer claim self-defense.

  7. Limitations to the Defenses • 2. Deadly force can be use only by a person who reasonable believes that there is imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm. • 3. A person is also allowed to use deadly or non-deadly force to defend a 3rd person if the person defended is entitled to claim self-defense.

  8. Limitations to these Defenses • 4. Reasonable non-deadly force may be used to protect property. Some states have enacted “make my day” laws which give people the right to use deadly force to defend their property against unwarranted intrusion.

  9. Defendant Committed a Criminal Act but is Not Criminally Responsible for his or her Actions • This takes in 6 different defenses. • 1. Infancy—traditionally children under the age of 7 were considered legally incapable of committing a crime. Today most states provide a child under specified age be turned over to the juvenile court system.

  10. Different Defenses • 2. Intoxication—as a defense, it is to claim that at the time of the crime, they were so drunk on alcohol or high on drugs that they didn’t know what they were doing. Generally, voluntary intoxication is not a defense to a crime. It can be a valid defense if the crime requires proof of a specific mental state.

  11. Different Defenses • EX—you are charged with assault with intent to kill. If you can prove you were so drunk that you could not form the intent to kill, your intoxication may be a valid defense. You could still be convicted of the crime of assault, because specific intent is not required to prove that crime.

  12. Different Defenses • If you decided to kill someone before you got drunk, or if you got drunk to get up the nerve to commit the crime, then intoxication would not be a defense. This is because the required mental state (the intent to kill) existed before you got drunk.

  13. Different Defenses • 3. Insanity—over the centuries this has evolved as an important legal concept. The ancient Greeks and Romans believed that insane people were not responsible for their actions and should be excused. Beginning in the 14th century, English courts have excused offenders who were mentally unable to control their conduct.

  14. Different Defenses • Today’s modern standard grew out of an 1843 case where an attempt was made to kill the British prime minister. • The basic idea is that people who have a mental disease should not be convicted if they don’t know what they are doing, or don’t know the

  15. Different Defenses • Difference between right and wrong. About ½ the states and the fed govt use this standard. The other states hold that an accused person must be acquitted if they lack the “substantial capacity” to understand what they did or to regulate their conduct to the law.

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