Chapter 1&2
Chapter 3&4
Chapter 5&6
Chapter 7&8
100

Where is most criminal law found?

State Criminal Codes

  

100

Legal duties can arise from

 Statutes, Contracts, and Special Relationships.

100

At the heart of the defense of consent is the high value placed on the right to

  Individual Autonomy.

100

Modern accessory-after-the-fact statutes typically have how many mens rea elements?

Two

200

Which of the following is protected by the First Amendment?

Flag Burning As A Political Protest

  

200

What failures to perform legal duties are punishable as criminal omissions?

  Unreasonable

200

Evidence that doesn’t amount to a perfect defense might amount to an imperfect defense; that is, defendants are

Guilty of Lesser Offenses.

  

200

Mere presence of the defendant at the scene of a crime may create accomplice liability if

The defendant has a duty to prevent the crime and fails to prevent or attempt to prevent it.

  

300

True Or False? Fighting words are not protected by the First Amendment.

True

300

Which doctrine imposes a legal duty to help or call for help for imperiled strangers?

the “Good Samaritan” doctrine

  

300

The case of The Queen v. Dudley and Stephens (1884) involves which defense?

The General Principle of Necessity

  

300

Which test on whether defendants have gone far enough toward completing the crime that it’s unlikely they’ll turn back?

The probable desistance test

  

400

According to the principle of there must be a specific law defining a crime and setting out the punishment before a person can be punished for that crime?

  Legality

400

General intent is the intent to

Have the Mens Rea.

  

400

Defendants who plead an excuse defense admit what they did was wrong but argue that, under the circumstances,

They Were Not Culpable for Their Actions.

  

400

Which of the following would be a valid impossibility defense?

 What the defendant plans to do to the victim is not a criminal act

500

Which of the following is not one of the criteria required for criminal punishment?

The penalty inflicts enough pain so the offender experiences the full extent of society’s approval.

500

What are the names of the two kinds of cause required to prove causation in “bad result” crimes?

Factual Cause and Legal Cause

  

500

Insanity excuses criminal liability because

The defendant was so mentally ill he or she couldn’t form criminal intent and/or control their actions.

500

What kind of conduct poses the following dilemma: whether to punish someone who’s done no harm or to set free someone who’s determined to commit a crime?

 Incomplete criminal conduct