What is larceny?
Trespassory taking and carrying away of another person's property with the intent to deprive them permanently
Murder is ________
unlawful killing of another human being with malice aforethought
Define Actus Reus
A voluntary act that causes social harm
When does life begin and end at CL and in CA?
CL: Life = birth, Death = heart stops (year and a day rule!)
CA: life = 7-8 weeks pregnant, Death = heart stops or brain death (NO year and a day)
You usually do not have a duty to act...but what are the exceptions for when there IS a legal duty?
-Status Relationship (parent to child, husband to wife, master to apprentice, ship's master to crew/passengers, innkeeper to inebriated customer)
-Contractual duty
-Voluntarily assumed care of victim and secluded them
-Actor created risk
-Statutory Duty
In California ____ degree murder is presumed. How do you change the charge from that degree to a different degree?
Second.
1. Willfully premeditated and deliberated (anderson test)
2. killing by atrocious means
3. enumerated felonies
List the enumerated felonies and atrocious means
EF: arson, rape, carjacking, robbery, burglary, mayhem, kidnapping, train wrecking
AM: destructive device/explosive, weapon of mass destruction, use of ammunition to penetrate armor, poison, lying in wait, torture
When can you use a mistake of fact defense and when can you use voluntary intoxication evidence?
Mistake of Fact: General intent crimes, specific intent to specific portion of the crime
Voluntary Intox: specific intent crimes
How do things differ for employees in CA vs CL in terms of larceny?
CL: employees have custody
CA: employee's have constructive possession (retain power to exercise control)
What are the elements of self-defense and who needs to prove it?
Prosecution must show these elements fail:
What is conspiracy?
agreement between 2+ people to commit an unlawful act or acts (CA: plus an overt act in furtherance)
Explain the difference between gross recklessness homicide and negligent homicide
Gross recklessness: second degree murder, test:
Negligence: involuntary manslaughter
Describe the Andersen test (components and which ones you need). Also, what is the test for??
1. Planning Activity
2. Motive Evidence
3. Nature of Killing
Need: all 3, OR strong 1, OR 2 with 1 or 3
Test to determine willfully premeditated and deliberated to elevate second to first degree murder
What is the difference between burglary at CL and CA?
CL: breaking and entering the dwelling of another at nighttime with the intent to commit a felony therein (entry = any part of defs body or tools to commit felony (not just tools to gain entry)
CA: any person who enters the space/property of another with the intent to commit a grand or petty larceny or ANY felony
What is Wharton's rule?
Expresses an exception to the No Merger Rule of conspiracy
What are the elements of conspiracy?
What are the four theories of CL murder and the two theories of CA murder?
CL: Intent to kill, intent to do serious bodily harm, gross recklessness, felony killing
CA: express malice and implied malice
What are the specific intent crimes we learned?
Assault with intent to kill
assault with intent to rape
attempts
conspiracies
burglary
theft by larceny
RSP
unlawful possession of narcotics
murder (express malice)
aiding and abetting
Describe the transition from murder to voluntary manslaughter and then describe how this differs from CL to CA
Provocation!
CL:
CA:
What factors should you consider to determine if something is a public welfare offense?
What are the elements of robbery?
Explain third party killings and the provocative act doctrine
Vic doesn't matter, who the killer is does
If co-def kills a vic, then you are liable too. If non-agent kills vic, you are not liable unless your code provoked the non-agent to kill the vic --> see below
Provocative act: (makes it implied malice based on gross recklessness)
What are the factors you weigh when determining if there is proximate cause (focusing on foreseeability)?
Define rape and statutory rape from both the common law and California standard. Then, describe the modern reforms
CL: Def had sexual intercourse: with a woman; who was not his wife; using physical force (or threat of physical force); without her consent and against her resistance --> vic must resist, statutory rape = 10 years old
CA: an act of sexual intercourse accomplished with a person not the spouse of the perpetrator, under any of the following circumstances:
Modern Reforms:
What are the insanity tests? And how do they differ?
M’Naughten Test (rule in CA today)