White Collar & Gang Crimes
Criminal Law 101
Act & Intent
Justifications & Excuses
Crimes Against People
100

Sutherland's definition of "White Collar Crime."

"A crime committed by a person of respectability and high social status in the course of his occupation."

100

The Two Types of Deterrence.

Specific and General Deterrence.

100

The Fundamental Elements of Crime.

Omission and Mens Rea.

100

Stated that people have the right to help citizens in need.

People v. Williams.

100

Is committed with "'conscious disregard' of the risk to life."

Depraved Heart Murder.

200

The key used to prove Identity Fraud.

Circumstantial Evidence.

200

The purpose of Imprisonment.

Rehabilitation.

200

States that a criminal act must be voluntary.

Volitional Act Requirement.

200

"The Mother of all Justifications."

Necessity.

200

"Any willful and unlawful use of force or violence upon person of another."

Battery.

300

Made monopolization and trade moderation illegal.

The Sherman Antitrust Act

300

Another name for "crime."

Public Offenses.

300

The two types of criminal acts.

Commissions and Omissions.

300

Defends the plead of insanity.

The M'Naghten Rule.

300

Two Classifications of Assault.

Attempted Battery and Putting Another in Fear.

400

"Defines a criminal street gang as 'any ongoing organization, association, or group of three or more persons..."

The STEP Act.

400
F.I.R.A.C.

"Facts, Issue, Rule, Analysis, and Conclusion."

400

The two requirements for a crime that must happen in unison with one another.

Mens Rea and Actus Reus.

400

"A defect of will."

Duress.

400

"the 'act or process of inflicting severe pain, esp. as a punishment in order to extort confession, or in revenge.'"

Torture.

500

Two of the issues with prosecuting innocent people under fear of gang relation.

Bias and Discrimination.

500

Refers to the Doctrine of Precedent.

Stare Decisis.

500

From People v. Hood; is "a particular act, without reference to intent to do a further act or achieve a future consequence."

General Intent Crime.

500

Apparent necessity, Imminence of threat, Use of reasonable force, countering unlawful harm.

The four requirements for self-defense.

500

States that killing someone while attempting to commit a felony is guilty of murder.

The Felony Murder Rule.