MBE Karlan Crimpro
MBE Karlan Crimpro
MBE Karlan Crimpro
A. Basic Principles
If parents severely beat a child, they do not violate the Cruel and
from youincluding your marijuana plants. He brings the items and the plants
back to his home and calls the government to notify them of what he found.
This is not a search.
The government calls Joes neighbor and asks her to break into
Joes house to see what she can find inside. This is a search under the Fourth
Amendment.
Example 4:
Defense counsel (both public and private) are treated as government actors for purposes of
the Sixth Amendment with respect to effective assistance of counsel.
In General
o
Police can approach anyone in a public place, and unless the encounter escalates to police
preventing ____________________________________________________there is no real
constraint on what the police can do and no protection against what they discover (e.g.,
tailing a suspect, canvassing a neighborhood and asking questions).
Seizure: Occurs when an officer, by means of ____________________________________ or
show of __________________________________________ intentionally terminates or
restrains the subjects freedom of movement
Example 5:
Types of Seizures
o
Stop and Frisk/Terry Stops: An officer can stop an individual when the officer has
____________________________ suspicion, based on ___________________________
facts, to believe the suspect is or is about to be engaged in criminal behavior.
If the pat-down reveals objects whose shape makes their identity obvious (i.e., its
obvious that the objects are contraband), the officer can seize those objects.
Traffic stops
Burden Hierarchy:
Officers do not need reasonable suspicion to stop drivers if they pull over everyone
(e.g., checkpoints).
Arrests
Pretext arrest: As long as the police have probable cause to believe an individual
committed Crime A, police may arrest that individual on the basis of a hunch that there
is another crime involved.
Example 6:
illegal drug activity. They see a man driving a carhe appears nervous and
somewhat suspicious. He then makes a turn without using his turn signal.
Police can pull over this driver because he failed to use his turn signaleven
though they were really concerned about drug activity. They did not have
probable cause to stop him for the drugs, but he could be pulled over because
they had probable cause to believe that he committed some crime.
Warrants
Absent an arrest warrant, officers can arrest someone inside a dwelling if: there are
(1) exigent circumstances or (2) there is ___________________ to enter.
o
Warrantless arrests
No finding of probable cause by neutral and detached magistrate but officer has
probable cause to believe the individual committed a crime.
Note 1: If the crime was not committed in the officers presence, the officer
can make an arrest only for a ___________________________________, i.e.
for an officer to arrest someone for a misdemeanor, the officer must have a
warrant or the misdemeanor must have been committed in his presence.
Example 7:
You just robbed a bank and fled the scene. Bank robbery is a
felony. An officer arrives and a witness describes you to the officer. The officer
walks around the area and notices you because you perfectly match the
suspects description. The officer can arrest you because he has probable cause.
A lawful arrest permits the arresting officers to make a contemporaneous search of the person
arrested and the immediate __________________________________________________ to:
o
o
Any evidence discovered during a search incident to a lawful arrest can be used against the
person arrested.
Arrest on the street: Can search the suspect and his ___________________________
Arrest at home: Can search the suspect and his immediate arrest area.
Cannot arrest a suspect, cuff him, and put him in the back of a squad car and then go
back and search through the car (because the suspect is not a danger to the officers
anymore; he cannot access a weapon from the car; and/or evidence from the crime is
likely not in the car)
Editor's Note 1: Note that if it is reasonable to believe that the vehicle
contains evidence of the offense of the arrest, such a search would be proper,
even though the suspect would no longer pose a threat to the officers.
Inventory searches
o
When the police arrest a driver and impound his car, it may be searched for inventory
purposes.
KEY: If the arrest was illegaleither because there was no probable cause or there was some
other violation of the lawthe presumption is that any evidence seized during the search
incident to the arrest should be excluded from the prosecutions case-in-chief.
Exam Tip 1: If exam question is about evidence obtained from a search
incident to arrest, make sure of two things: (i) arrest was with probable cause
and (ii) search was not beyond the scope of search incident to arrest. If either
is not present, evidence will be excludable in prosecution's case in chief.
CHAPTER 2:
SEARCHES
Exam Tip 2: "Searches" is a topic that is often tested.
A. What is a Search?
Government: Must be government conduct (e.g., it is not a search if your mother or private
employer goes through your things)
Reasonable expectation of privacy:
Homes
________________________________
Offices
Luggage
Public streets
_______________________________ property
Example 8:
Quentin goes into the dressing room of a fancy mens store and
hides a valuable leather belt in his underwear. Wendy, a store security guard
monitoring a hidden camera in the dressing room, sees Quentin. As Quentin is
leaving the store, Wendy grabs him, handcuffs him, thrusts her hands into his
pants, and grabs the belt. Wendy calls the police and Quentin is subsequently
charged with larceny. He argues that the belt should be excluded from evidence
because the search violated his constitutional rights. What result?
a) The belt should be excluded from evidence because having female security
personnel monitoring the intimate space of a mens dressing room violates a
reasonable expectation of privacy. (Incorrect choice. Store is not the
government.)
b) The belt should be admitted because individuals have no reasonable
expectation of privacy in hiding stolen goods. (Belt will be admitted - but not for
this reason, therefore incorrect choice.)
c) The belt should be excluded because Wendys reaching into Quentins pants
constituted a search incident to arrest. (No government action - so, incorrect
choice.)
d) The belt should be admitted because there was no search. (Correct choice silver platter)
teller and blood spattered everywhere; there was a getaway car. The loot that
was stolen from the bank is the fruit of the crime; the gun used to commit the
robbery is an instrumentality of the crime; the tire tread marks of the getaway
car or the bloody shirt the robber wore are evidence of the crime.
If a warrant does not meet the above requirements (issued by neutral magistrate, based on
probable cause, and described with sufficient particularly), the warrant is __________________,
and the items seized pursuant to the warrant will be __________________________ from the
prosecutions case-in-chief.
Exigent circumstances
Search incident to arrest
Consent
Automobiles
Plain view
Evidence obtained from administrative searches
Stop and frisk
Exigent Circumstances
o
o
Officers are entitled to secure premises (i.e., prevent people from moving things) while they
obtain a warrant, but sometimes this is not sufficient.
If officers are in hot pursuit or immediate danger, they may conduct a search without
getting a warrant first.
Example 10: A woman runs out of a building and tells an officer that there is a
man inside with a bomb who is threatening to blow everyone up. The officer
may enter the building and search without first obtaining a warrant.
Example 11: If officers believe that a suspect dropped a weapon in a place
where a small child might pick it up, officers may look for the weapon without
first obtaining a warrant.
o
o
However, a warrant is necessary for a search if officers themselves create the exigent
circumstances.
Note that the Supreme Court recently held that generally a warrant is required for a search
incident to DUI arrest. A DUI arrest is not an exigent circumstance that allows for an
immediate blood alcohol concentration test unless exigent circumstances are such that it is
impossible to get a warrant (late at night so judge is unavailable for a warrant, far from a
hospital)
If the arrest was lawful, a search warrant is unnecessary. Scope of the search is limited to
things within the reach of the defendant.
A search incident to arrest for a serious crime can include taking a DNA sample from the
arrestee.
Consent
o
o
o
Exception: Officers cannot search over a present occupants objection and use the
evidence against him. (Georgia v. Randolph) However, if suspect was not present, and
occupant consented, search would be valid.
Automobiles
o
Plain View
o
If police are ___________________________ on the premises, they can seize any item in
plain view (or plain smell), even if that item was not named in the warrant.
Example 15: If police are legally present in a house and they smell marijuana,
they can seize the marijuana. If they see stolen goods, they may seize the stolen
goods.
Administrative warrants
Examples:
o
o
o
o
o
o
CHAPTER 3:
INTERROGATIONS
Key starting point for the privilege against self-incrimination: Miranda v. Arizona
Does not include volunteered statements, but does include induced statements
3. Miranda Warnings
o
Before conducting custodial interrogations, the police must inform the suspect:
o
o
I.e., Defendant understands English, can hear, and actually heard what was said
No magic words: As long as the substance of the Miranda warnings is communicated, it will
be sufficient
The police must cease questioning if either of the following occurs:
If a defendant says she does not want to talk, the interrogation must
__________________. The right must be affirmatively invoked; it is not enough to
just remain silent.
If the right to counsel is invoked, all questioning must stop until either (i) the lawyer
is present, or (ii) the defendant ___________________________ contact with
police. Police cannot generally go back to the defendant.
o
Exception: If there is a break of more than two weeks between the first and
second attempts at interrogation, the second statements can be used as long as
the defendant waives her Miranda rights the second time around.
Police do not have to tell the defendant that a lawyer is trying to reach her if the
defendant does not ask for the lawyer.
When public safety is at risk, the police do not have to give Miranda warnings before
questioning.
Example 21: If there is a ticking time-bomb in a grocery store, the police need
not give Miranda warnings before questioning people. Or if police are called to
a school and told that a man planted a bomb inside, they can arrest the man
because they have probable cause and can question him about the bombs
whereabouts before giving Miranda warnings.
5. Interrogation Tactics
o
o
Two categories:
o
o
o
o
CHAPTER 4:
In addition to the Fifth Amendment right to counsel for custodial interrogations (covered in the
Miranda discussion), the Sixth Amendment explicitly provides a criminal defendant with the
_____________________________ of counsel for his defense.
How is it invoked? Automatically attaches once there has been an indictment, information,
or other formal charges and exists unless a defendant knowingly and intelligently
________________________ the right.
To what charges does the right apply? The Sixth Amendment right to counsel is offensespecific. A defendant has a Sixth Amendment right to counsel only with regard to the
offenses for which he has actually been ____________________ (and any lesser-included
offenses).
By contrast, the Fifth Amendment Miranda right applies to custodial interrogation for
any charge, but not to non-custodial interrogation.
Hearings
Post-indictment lineups
Post-indictment interrogations
All parts of the trial process, including guilty pleas, sentencing, and appeals as of
right
B. Identification Procedures
1. Types of Procedures
o
Photo arrays: Neither the defendant nor his lawyer has the right to be
__________________________, but police must turn over the array to the defendant.
Pre-indictment lineups: Defendant has no right to counsel.
Post-indictment lineups: Defendant has a right to have ___________________ present.
If that right is violated, then evidence that the witness identified the defendant at the
lineup must be excluded.
2. Admissibility
o
If the defendant moves to suppress evidence that a witness picked the defendant out of
a lineup, the court will consider whether the lineup was
______________________________________________________
If it was, the court can exclude the testimony.
In-court identification
Application
Example 28: Ingrid is charged with art theft. The prosecution alleges that she
stole a small but valuable sculpture from an art gallery by putting it into a large
shopping bag. The police ask Oscar, who works at the gallery, to view a photo
array of five potential perpetrators. Ingrid is the only blonde-haired woman in
the array and she appears quite a bit younger than the others. Oscar identifies
Ingrid. The police then place Ingrid in a lineup. Preeta, another gallery
employee, views the lineup. The Assistant D.A. asks Preeta, Do you see the
person who walked out of the gallery with a large shopping bag? Preeta says
no, but adds that she saw the third person from the left Ingrid reach into
a ladys pocket and steal her wallet. The A.D.A. knows that another patron at
the gallery, Sarah, had filed a complaint with the police that her pocket had
been picked on the day of the alleged sculpture heist. So the A.D.A. obtains a
search warrant for Ingrids house, and the police find Sarahs wallet. Ingrid is
now charged with larceny against Sarah as well as art theft. What evidence can
the police use?
Editor's Note 2: The professor misspoke, referring to Sarah as the perpetrator,
rather than Ingrid.
A) Can the police use the wallet at Ingrid's trial for larceny? They can still use
the wallet because, even though Ingrid's lawyer was not present at the lineup,
Ingrid had not yet been charged with larceny with respect to the wallet, so it
was a pre-indictment lineup with regard to that charge.
B) Can the prosecution use Oscars identification of Ingrid from the photo array
at Ingrids trial for art theft? Here, Ingrid's lawyer was not present at the photo
array but the photo array does not require the lawyer to be present. It may be
that Oscar's in-court identification of Ingrid is invalid because the photo array
was so suggestive. That will be a question for the judge to answer.
CHAPTER 5:
The Exclusionary Rule applies at ____________________ and not to pretrial proceedings (e.g.,
grand jury proceedings).
A. Standing
The violation must have been of the _______________________________ rights, and not
someone elses rights.
Example 29: Police enter Ellens house without a warrant and while there, they
find a photograph of Robert holding a sawed-off shotgun. Robert would have
no standing to object to introduction of the photograph at his trial for
possessing an illegal weapon, since it was Ellens Fourth Amendment rights that
were violated.
Example 30: Lucy is arrested but police do not give her Miranda warnings. If
she makes a statement about a robbery that you and she committed together,
you cannot suppress her statements at your trial (because it was a violation of
Lucy's rights, not your rights).
One slight qualification: If the driver of a car is arrested without probable cause, passengers are
deemed to have been seized as well, so they ____________ challenge the constitutionality of
the stop.
_________________ of the Poisonous Tree: The exclusionary rule applies not only to the
evidence obtained in violation of the Constitution, but also to evidence obtained as a result
of the initial violation.
Example 31: Police illegally search your house and find a safe deposit box key.
Items that police find inside the deposit box are considered fruit of the
poisonous tree, because __________________the first illegal search, they
would not have found the items in the safe deposit box.
5 Exceptions
o
Knock and announce: Although officers executing an arrest warrant at a residence are
required to knock and request admission, if they fail to do so, burst in, and discover
evidence, that evidence is _______________________________
Inevitable discovery: If the evidence would have been discovered anyway through
_______________________ means, it will be admissible.
Example 32: While Officer Thomas was searching Ulysses house without
probable cause, Officer Young, who had probable cause, was in the process of
acquiring a search warrant.
o
o
Good faith
Note 4: Some states do not have a good faith exception to the exclusionary
rule as a matter of state constitutional law. But, under federal constitutional
law, as long as there was a warrant that was facially valid, and the officers had
no reason to look behind that, they can rely on that warrant to conduct a
search. If the warrant is later found to be invalid, the fruits of the search are
still admissible.
Key Points
o
Remember that suppression is an issue only after you conclude that there has been a
________________________________________________ in the first place.
Fourth Amendment: Was there a search? Was there a seizure? If yes, was there
probable cause? Fourth Amendment violation exists only if you can say that there was a
search or seizure but no probable cause.
Fifth Amendment: Was there a Fifth Amendment interrogation violation? Was the
defendant in custody? Was there an interrogation? Was the defendant given
warnings? Did he invoke his rights?
Sixth Amendment: Did the Sixth Amendment right to counsel attach? Was this a critical
stage?
If so, ask whether the exclusionary rule applies to that kind of violation.
Example 35: The exclusionary rule does not apply to knock and announce
violations.
If it is the kind of violation to which the exclusionary rule attaches, then ask whether one of
the ________________________________ to the exclusionary rule makes the evidence
admissible anyway.
Finally, if the question involves whether a conviction should be overturned (rather than
simply whether the evidence should be suppressed), apply the harmless error rule: Ask, if
this piece of evidence had not been let in, would it make a difference to the outcome?
CHAPTER 6:
PRETRIAL PROCEDURES
Under the Fifth Amendments Presentment Clause, all federal felony charges must be
initiated by _________________________ unless the defendant waives indictment.
The Fifth Amendment Presentment Clause has not been incorporated to the states, so the
states have the choice of whether to proceed by grand jury indictment or by
_____________________________
Grand juries can consider evidence that involves __________________________or that has
been obtained in violation of the Constitution in deciding whether to indict.
Defendants do not have the right to _______________________ before the grand jury or to call
witnesses.
Witnesses do not have the right to ________________________ within the grand jury room,
although they can leave the grand jury room to consult with their lawyers.
If a defendant is competent to stand trial, he is also competent to waive the right to trial and to
plead guilty
D. Bail
The Eighth Amendment forbids the setting of ____________________________ bail, but does
not state outright that bail must be offered pending trial.
General rule: Bail is available unless the defendant poses either a flight risk or a danger
to the community. There is a presumption in favor of release pending trial and a
presumption against release after conviction, pending appeal.
Courts can impose pretrial release conditions on defendants, such as reporting
requirements, house arrest, monitoring, or avoidance of particular locations or people.
E. Guilty Pleas
The majority of defendants do not go to trial: the charges are either dismissed or the defendant
pleads guilty
A guilty plea ____________________ the various trial rights a defendant would otherwise have,
such as the right to put the prosecution to its proof, to trial by jury, to challenge the introduction
of evidence, to appeal if there is a conviction.
Informs the defendant of his rights and ensures that the defendant understands those rights
Informs the defendant of the possible sentences
Makes sure there is a factual basis for the plea
Determines that the plea did not result from ____________________, threats, or
____________________________
That the defendant understands the immigration consequences of pleading guilty
If a defendant is not provided with an appropriate plea allocution, the defendant can challenge
his plea as an involuntary waiver of his rights.
If a defendant challenges his plea agreement, the conviction is wiped out. The prosecution
goes back to square one. (The prosecution can reinstate charges that it had dropped. )
Guilty plea process is a critical stage - Defendant is entitled to have effective assistance of
counsel under the Sixth Amendment. Absent the effective assistance of counsel, the defendant
can withdraw his guilty plea and the case will go back to square one.
CHAPTER 7:
A. The Jury
1. Defendants Right to a Jury Trial
o
The Sixth Amendment provides a right to jury trial for all _________________________
offenses, providing he asks for it. Serious offenses are those for which the authorized
punishment is more than ____________ months.
Note 5: The Sixth Amendment right to counsel attaches in misdemeanor cases
only if a sentence of incarceration is actually imposed.
2. Jury Size
o
o
Federal: A jury in a federal criminal case must have ________ members and must decide the
case ________________________________
States: States can use juries of _______ or more in criminal cases. If the state uses a jury of
12 members, the juries do not have to be ______________________________.
3. Jury Selection
o
The petit or petty jury is selected through the process of voir dire.
Jurors can be removed for cause when they reveal something that will prevent them
from deliberating ______________________ (e.g., if a juror knew the victim; if a
juror was a friend of one of the witnesses; or worked for the defendant's company)
Defendants can be injured by the passage of time between an alleged ______________ and
their _________________
Statutes of limitations give defendants repose.
Statutes of limitations normally begin to run when the crime was committed.
For continuing offenses (e.g., conspiracy), the statute of limitations does not begin to
run until the end of the offense (e.g., until the conspiracys purpose has been achieved
or abandoned).
Example 36: In January 2003, Pam entered into a conspiracy to distribute
drugs. The conspiracy continued until 2007. The statute of limitations begins to
run from 2007, not 2003.
A court faced with a Speedy Trial Clause claim looks at four factors:
The Sixth Amendment and First Amendment, taken together, protect the rights of the
defendant (Sixth) and the public (First) to attend public trials.
Courts do have some discretion to close particular proceedings if there is a substantial
likelihood of ___________________________
Bruton Category
Defendants right to present witnesses: The defendant has the right to testify on his own
behalf. He also has the right to compulsory process to obtain witnesses in his defense.
4. Burden of Proof
o
o
The government can place the burden of proof with regard to affirmative defenses on
_______________________________
CHAPTER 8:
A. Judges
o
The Due Process Clause requires that judges possess neither actual nor
______________________________ bias.
B. Prosecutors
1. Four Prosecutorial Duties
o
Evidence that tends to show that the defendant is not guilty of the crimes charged
o
o
2. Prosecutorial Misconduct
o
o
Prosecutorial misconduct that has a reasonable possibility of affecting the verdict may
require a __________________________ or reversal of a conviction.
Other forms of prosecutorial misconduct may result in discipline to prosecutor but generally
do not result in any consequence for a defendant.
C. Defense Counsel
The Supreme Court has held that the Sixth Amendment not only guarantees defendants the
right to the assistance of counsel, it also guarantees them _________________________
assistance of counsel.
1. Conflicts of Interest
o
Joint representation, when a lawyer represents several different defendants at trial, can
pose problems for a defendant because of the possibility of divided loyalty, i.e., defense
lawyer may not try to throw blame on someone other than the client.
2. Effective Assistance
o
The Supreme Court has developed a two-part test (the Strickland test) for assessing whether
a defendant was denied effective assistance: Performance and Prejudice
Performance: Did defense counsels performance fall below the wide range of
_______________________________________________ conduct that lawyers might
engage in?
Example 43: The defendant shot the victim in the buttocks and was charged
with assault with intent to kill, attempted murder. The defendants lawyer told
him that he would be acquitted if he went to trial because the elements of the
crime of attempted murder mean you have to intend the victim's death; by
shooting someone in the buttocks you can't be intending to kill them. Here, the
lawyer got the law totally wrong. Shooting at someone is enough to show
intent to kill.
Example 44: A lawyer who tells her client that there are no immigration
consequences to a conviction in the case would also be performing below the
level expected of a reasonable lawyer.
Cases that go to trial: Defendant must show that there was a reasonable probability
that he would not have been _________________________ if the lawyer had done
a proper job.
Guilty pleas: Defendant must show that he would not have pleaded guilty if his
lawyer had done a decent job. It's insufficient to show that an effective lawyer
would have gotten a better plea deal. The defendant must show that he would
have gone to trial. -
If a defendant is denied effective assistance of counsel, either at trial or in the guilty plea
process, his conviction must be reversed.
Note 6: Once inadequate performance and prejudice have been shown,
Ineffective assistance of counsel can never be harmless because, by definition,
the defendant has been prejudiced.
3. Choice of Counsel
o
Defendants who can afford retained counsel are entitled to the counsel of their choice as
long as the lawyer is:
A defendant who is denied the retained counsel of his choice is entitled to have his
conviction ____________________________ regardless of whether the lawyer who actually
represented him at trial provided effective assistance of counsel.
Indigent defendants: Not entitled to appointment of the lawyer
_______________________________________
As long as they receive competent assistance at trial, they have received all the
Constitution guarantees them.
4. Proceeding Pro Se
A defendant who proceeds pro se does not have a constitutional right to a back-up lawyer
CHAPTER 9:
The Supreme Court has given the government free rein to authorize virtually any length
sentence for virtually _____________________________
Example 46: "Three strikes" provisions that put someone in jail for the rest of
his life for stealing golf clubs if it is a third offense have been upheld.
Exception: Juveniles cannot be sentenced to life without parole for non-homicide crimes.
Exam Tip 4: Length of prison sentences is very unlikely to be tested because
the Eighth Amendment has very little to say on the subject.
2. Capital Punishment
o
Rule: In cases that involve an actual individual victim, the Supreme Court has held that
________________________________________ can be imposed only in cases in which the
victim dies.
Rule: The death penalty cannot be imposed on:
Defendants who were under the age of _________ when they committed the crime
Mentally retarded defendants
Defendants who are _________________________ at the time of execution (even if
they were sane at the time the crime was committed.)
The state must provide a variety of special safeguards before executing a defendant; these
can include a bifurcated trial process; the ability of the defendant to present any mitigating
evidence at the sentencing proceedings; and a process that sufficiently narrows the class of
death-sentence eligible offenses.
Exam Tip 5: The states death penalty procedures are sufficiently distinct from
one another that it seems unlikely that the MBE will test on those procedures
themselves.
Courts have extended this Eighth Amendment protection to degrading things done to prison
inmates. Examples include denial of medical treatment and use of hitching posts.
Exam Tip 6: But the law here is so fact-specific and complicated that its
unlikely to be on an MBE question.
Ask: (A) What counts as the same offense? (B) Has jeopardy attached and has it been
completed?
The Blockburger test: Ask whether each statutory provision requires proof of an element
that the other does not
Example 50: Offense #1 = A + B and Offense #2 = A + C (These are separate
offenses and you can be prosecuted and punished for both.)
Larceny = (taking the property of another) + (intent to permanently deprive)
Conspiracy to commit larceny = (agreement to take property)
Example 51: Offense #1 = A + B and Offense #2 = A + B + C
These are not separate offenses; Offense #1 is a _________________________
offense. (If you are prosecuted for and acquitted or convicted of larceny, you
cannot be indicted and prosecuted for robbery in the same episode.)
Larceny = (taking the property of another) + (intent to permanently deprive)
Robbery = (taking the property of another) + (intent to permanently deprive) +
(use or threat of force)
Example 52: Isaac shoots his gun and the bullet goes through Cain and hits
Abel. He has committed two offenses. He can be tried for murdering Cain, and
regardless of the outcome, he can be tried for murdering Abel as well.
Separate Sovereigns Rule: If two different sovereigns have jurisdiction over the crime
committed (e.g., a state and the U.S. or two different states), they can each try the
defendant separately. The Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar a defendant from
being tried, convicted, and punished in both jurisdictions.
Jeopardy attaches when a ________________ is sworn in or, in a bench trial, when the
______________________________________ is sworn in.
Acquittal: If the jury acquits the defendant, it is the _____________ of the case and the
defendant cannot be ____________________ by the same jurisdiction for the same offense.
Conviction: If the jury convicts the defendant, and he appeals and gets the conviction
reversed, he can be retried unless the reversal was based on _________________________
of evidence.
Before the trial begins, the prosecutor can add, drop, or change the charges against a
defendant without Double Jeopardy problems.
If the jury convicts the defendant and he either does not appeal or his conviction is
affirmed, that is the end of jeopardy and he cannot be retried by the same jurisdiction
for the same offense.
Two components:
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