Transcript Slide 1

Criminal Law
Chapter 6
Defenses to Criminal Liability:
Excuse
Joel Samaha, 9th Ed.
Insanity
Insanity is a legal concept,
not a medical term.
or,
What psychiatry calls “mental illness”
may not be legal insanity.
Insanity excuses criminal liability
only when it seriously damages the person’s reason
and/or will to act or to understand.
Few defendants plead the insanity defense,
and those that do hardly ever succeed.
Tests of Insanity

Right-wrong test (M/Naghten rule)

Volitional capacity (irresistible impulse)

Substantial capacity test (the MPC test)

Product test (Durham rule)
M’Naghten’s Case (1843)*
Two pronged right-wrong test:
1) The defendant had a mental disease at the time of the
crime, and
2) The disease or defect caused the defendant not to know
either
a) The nature and the quality of his or her actions, or
b) That what he or she was doing was wrong.
* The rule in 28 jurisdictions.
M’Naghten’s Case (cont’d)*
Explain the following key word(s) and phrases from the
M’Naghten two-pronged right wrong test.
Mental disease
Mental defect
Know
Nature and quality of the act
Wrong
* Pennsylvania: M'Naghten Rule, burden of proof on defendant,
guilty but mentally ill verdicts allowed.
The Irresistible Impulse Test or
Volitional Incapacity
Some jurisdictions supplement the right-wrong test with a test
which takes volition or willpower into account –
irresistible impulse.
In addition to the two pronged right-wrong test, if the
defendant did know right from wrong, the law will still
excuse the defendant if two conditions occur:
a) If the mental disease caused the defendant to so far lose
the power to chose between right and wrong and to avoid
committing the alleged act because the disease destroyed
his free will, and
b) If the mental disease was the sole cause of the act.
The Irresistible Impulse Test
(cont’d)
Why did the federal government (and several states)
abolish the irresistible impulse defense in 1984 ?
The Substantial Capacity Test*
A person is not responsible for criminal conduct if
at the time of such conduct as a result of mental disease or defect
he lacks substantial capacity either to appreciate the criminality
[wrongfulness] of his conduct or to conform his conduct
to the requirements of law (Model Penal Code – ALI, 1985).
Explain the use of appreciate instead of know.
Explain the phrase, conform his conduct.
(“mental disease or defect” excludes psychopathic personalities,
habitual criminals, and antisocial personalities from the defense).
* Fourteen jurisdictions use this rule.
Question
What was the criticism of the right-wrong test
in the California Supreme Court case
People v. Drew ?
583 P.2d 1318 (Cal.1978)
The Product-of-Mental-Illness Test
(the Durham Rule)


Acts that are the “products” of mental disease or defect
excuse criminal liability.
Only the U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Columbia, and
the states of Maine and New Hampshire ever adopted the
‘product test.’ The U.S Congress did away with the ‘product’
for federal jurisdiction after John Hinckley’s trial for
attempting to assassinate President Reagan. New
Hampshire is the only state still using the product test,
which was adopted in 1871.
Burden of Proof




Federal law: defendants have to prove they were insane by
clear and convincing evidence.
Most states: Insanity is an affirmative defense – sanity and
responsibility is presumed. Defense has to offer some
evidence of insanity; then the burden shifts to the
government to prove sanity.
States differ on burden of proof standards: proof beyond a
reasonable doubt, clear and convincing evidence, and some
require a preponderance of the evidence.
The trend is to shift the burden to the defendant and to
make it heavier.
Diminished Capacity
What is the difference between
diminished capacity
and
diminished responsibility?
Age
According to common law,
what are the three categories of deciding young people’s
capacity to commit crimes?
Why are more juveniles at younger ages being tried as adults?
Duress
There are four elements for duress, however,
these elements vary from state to state.
1)
2)
3)
4)
Threats amounting to duress, e.g., death threats, ‘serious bodily
injury,’ or no specific threat.
Immediacy of the threats, e.g., instant, imminent, or immediate.
Crimes the defense applies to, i.e., the majority of states say it is
not a defense to murder, in other states, it is a defense to all
crimes.
Degree of belief regarding the threat, i.e., most states require
that there a reasonable belief the threat is real, others require
that the threat is actually real.
Duress
It’s hard to blame someone
who was forced to commit a crime,
but should we excuse people who harm innocent people
to save themselves?
Intoxication
How do the principles
of accountability and culpability
affect the defense of intoxication?
Involuntary intoxication is an excuse to criminal liability
in all states.
Alcohol is not the only intoxicant covered by the defense of
intoxication. In most states, it includes all “substances”
that disturb mental and physical capacities.
Entrapment
Is entrapment an affirmative defense? Explain.
What is the subjective test of entrapment?
What is the objective test of entrapment?
What were the facts and findings in the
U.S. Supreme Court’s decision - Sherman vs. U.S. (1958)?
What are the facts, legal question, and opinion of the following
two cases?
Oliver v. State (1985)
DePasquale v. State (1988)
Syndromes
Define syndrome as it relates to mental states.
Should all syndromes be excuses to criminal liability?
Do you agree or disagree with the opinion of the
Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals’
decision in State v. Phipps (1994)?