Criminal Law Basics
Mens Rea & Concurrence
Justification vs. Excuse
Self-Defense Rules
Consent & Necessity
100

What is criminal conduct?

A criminal act triggered by criminal intent

100

What does mens rea mean?

Guilty mind or criminal intent

100

What is a justification defense?

The act was right under the circumstances

100

What is the imminence requirement?

The danger must be immediate

100

What is voluntary consent?

Consent given freely without force or coercion

200

What is an affirmative defense?

A defense where the defendant must present evidence supporting the defense

200

What is concurrence?

When the criminal act and criminal intent occur at the same time

200

What is an excuse defense?

The act was wrong but the defendant is not responsible

200

What is the retreat rule?

A duty to retreat if safely possible

200

What is knowing consent?

Consent given with understanding

300

What is a perfect defense?

A defense that results in acquittal if successful

300

Which crime element refers to the act itself?

Actus reus

300

Is self-defense a justification or excuse?

Justification

300

What is stand-your-ground?

No duty to retreat if lawfully present

300

What is authorized consent?

Consent given by someone with legal authority

400

What is an imperfect defense?

A defense that reduces the severity of the offense but does not excuse guilt

400

What happens if mens rea is missing?

The defendant may not be criminally liable

400

Is insanity a justification or excuse?

Excuse

400

What is the castle exception?

No duty to retreat in one’s home

400

What is the necessity defense?

A crime committed to prevent greater harm

500

What are mitigating circumstances?

Factors that reduce punishment but do not eliminate guilt

500

What does mens rea refer to in criminal law?

The defendant’s guilty mind or criminal intent

500

Which defense admits the act but denies responsibility?

Excuse defense

500

What is the withdrawal exception?

Initial aggressor may regain self-defense if they withdraw

500

What is the choice-of-evils defense?

Choosing a lesser crime to avoid greater harm