Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
100

What is misdemeanors?

offenses punishable by fine and/or confinement in the local jail for up to one year

100

What is three-strikes laws?

intended to make sure that offenders who are convicted of a third felony get locked up for a very long time (sometimes for life)

100

criminal liability

“conduct that unjustifiably and inexcusably inflicts or threatens substantial harm to individual or public interests”

100

motive

something that causes a person to act


100

stand-your-ground rule

if you didn’t start a fight, you can stand your ground and kill to defend yourself without retreating from any place you have a right to be

200

What is felonies?

crimes punishable by death or confinement in the state’s prison for one year to life without parole

200

Second Amendment

“the right of law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home”

200

actus reus

the requirement that all crimes have to include a voluntary criminal act, which is the physical element of a crime and the first principle of criminal liability

200

subjective fault

fault that requires a “bad mind” in the actor

200

retreat rule

you have to retreat from an attack if you reasonably believe (1) that you’re in danger of death or serious bodily harm; and (2) that backing off won’t unreasonably put you in danger of death or serious bodily harm

300

What is the U.S. Criminal Code?

criminal law created by the U.S. Congress

300

proof beyond a reasonable doubt

the highest burden of proof in the U.S. Criminal justice system reserved for criminal cases; the prosecution must prove every element of the crime charged to this standard

300

mens rea

criminal intent, the mental element of a crime

300

objective fault

requires no purposeful or conscious bad mind in the actor

300

castle exception

when attacked in your home, you have no duty to retreat and can use deadly force to fend off an unprovoked attack, but only if you reasonably believe the attack threatens death or serious bodily injury

400

What is culpability?

only someone who intends to harm her victim deserves punishment; accidents don’t qualify

400

fair notice

in vague laws, isn’t whether the defendant knows there’s a law against the act but whether an ordinary, reasonable person would know that the act is a crime

400

corpus delicti

Latin for “body of the crime”; it refers to the body of victims in homicides and to the elements of the crime in other crimes

400

causation

holding an actor criminally accountable for the results of her conduct

400

cohabitant exception

in the jurisdictions that follow the retreat rule, people who live in the same home don’t have to retreat

500

What is hedonism?

the natural law that human beings seek pleasure and avoid pain

500

ex post facto laws

a retroactive law that does one of three things: (1) criminalizes an act that wasn’t a crime when it was committed, (2) increases the punishment for a crime after the crime was committed, or (3) takes away a defense that was available to a defendant when the crime was committed

500

criminal omission

the failure to act when there’s a legal duty to act

500

mistake of fact

a defense to criminal liability whenever the mistake prevents the formation of any fault-based mental attitude—namely, purposely, knowingly, recklessly, or negligently

500

battered woman’s syndrome (BWS)

mental disorder that develops in victims of domestic violence as a result of serious, long-term abuse

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