The Nature, Purpose, and Function of Criminal Law

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The Nature, Purpose, and

Function of Criminal Law 1


May the police officers be subjected to prosecution in both state and federal court?
As the videotape begins, it shows that King rose from the point, the officers stepped back and observed King for about
ground and charged toward Officer Powell. Powell took a step 10 seconds. . . . At one-minute-five-seconds (1:05) on the vid-
and used his baton to strike King on the side of his head. King eotape, Briseno, in the District Court’s words, “stomped” on
fell to the ground. From the eighteenth to the thirtieth second King’s upper back or neck. King’s body writhed in response. At
on the videotape, King attempted to rise, but Powell and Wind 1:07, Powell and Wind again began to strike King with a series
each struck him with their batons to prevent him from doing of baton blows, and Wind kicked him in the upper thoracic or
so. From the thirty-fifth to the fifty-first second, Powell admin- cervical area six times until 1:26. At about 1:29, King put his
istered repeated blows to King’s lower extremities; one of the hands behind his back and was handcuffed.
blows fractured King’s leg. At the fifty-fifth second, Powell struck
King on the chest, and King rolled over and lay prone. At that For a deeper look at this topic, visit the study site.

Core Concepts and Summary Statements


Introduction The Principles of Criminal Law B. The common law originated in the
common customs and practices of
The criminal law is the foundation of Basic principles essential for understanding the people of England and can be
the criminal justice system. The law the criminal law include the concepts traced to the Norman conquest of
defines the acts that may lead to an of criminal acts, criminal intent, the England in 1066 a.d. This law was
arrest, prosecution, and imprisonment. concurrence between acts and intent, transported to the American colonies.
States punish a range of acts in their causality, responsibility, and defenses. C. American states in the nineteenth
criminal codes. century began to adopt
Categories of Crime comprehensive criminal codes.
The Nature of Criminal Law A. Felonies are punishable by States today differ on whether they
death or by imprisonment for continue to recognize the common
Crime is conduct that, if shown to
more than a year. Other offenses law in areas not addressed by state
have taken place, will result in a formal
are misdemeanors. Some states statutes. Most states no longer
and solemn pronouncement of moral
provide for minor offenses that do recognize the common law, and there
condemnation by the community.
not result in imprisonment; these are no federal common law crimes.
are referred to as violations or D. States possess the broad authority to
Criminal and Civil Law protect the health, safety, welfare,
infractions.
The civil law protects the individual B. Mala in se crimes are inherently evil; well-being, and tranquility of the
rather than the public interest. mala prohibita crimes are not viewed community.
as inherently evil. E. In 1962, the American Law Institute
C. Crimes also may be categorized by adopted the Model Penal Code to
The Purpose of Criminal Law encourage and guide the uniform
subject matter; examples are crimes
The criminal law prohibits conduct that against a person or property. drafting and reform of state
causes or threatens the public interest; statutes.
defines and warns people of the acts F. The U.S. Constitution assigns various
that are subject to criminal punishment; Sources of Criminal Law powers to the federal government
distinguishes between serious and minor A. There are a number of sources of that form the foundation for the
offenses; and imposes punishment criminal law ranging from the federal criminal code.
to protect society and to satisfy the common law to state and federal G. The U.S. and individual state
demands for retribution, rehabilitation, statutes to the U.S. and state constitutions establish limits and
and deterrence. constitutions. standards for the criminal law.

1
2 Contemporar y Criminal Law

Introduction
The criminal law is the foundation of the criminal justice system. The law defines the conduct that
may lead to an arrest by the police, trial before the courts, and incarceration in prison. When we
think about criminal law, we typically focus on offenses such as rape, robbery, and murder. States,
however, condemn a range of acts in their criminal codes, some of which may surprise you. In
Alabama, it is a criminal offense to promote or engage in a wrestling match with a bear or to train
a bear to fight in such a match.1 A Florida law states that it is unlawful to possess “any ignited
tobacco product” in an elevator.2 Rhode Island declares that an individual shall be imprisoned
for seven years who voluntarily engages in a duel with a dangerous weapon or who challenges an
individual to a duel.3 In Wyoming you can be arrested for skiing while being impaired by alcohol4
or for opening and failing to close a gate in a fence that “crosses a private road or river.”5 You can
find criminal laws on the books in various states punishing activities such as playing dominos
on Sunday, feeding an alcoholic beverage to a moose, cursing on a miniature golf course, making
love in a car, or performing a wedding ceremony when either the bride or groom is drunk.6 In
Louisiana, you risk being sentenced to ten years in prison for stealing an alligator, whether dead
or alive, valued at $1,000.7

The Nature of Criminal Law


Are there common characteristics of acts that are labeled as crimes? How do we define a crime? The
easy answer is that a crime is whatever the law declares to be a criminal offense and punishes with
a penalty. The difficulty with this approach is that not all criminal convictions result in a fine or
imprisonment. Rather than punishing a defendant, the judge may merely warn him or her not to
repeat the criminal act. Most commentators stress that the important feature of a crime is that it is
an act that is officially condemned by the community and carries a sense of shame and humiliation.
Professor Henry M. Hart, Jr. defines crime as “conduct which, if . . . shown to have taken place” will
result in the “formal and solemn pronouncement of the moral condemnation of the community.”8
The central point of Professor Hart’s definition is that a crime is subject to formal condemna-
tion by a judge and jury representing the people in a court of law. This distinguishes a crime from
acts most people would find objectionable that typically are not subject to state prosecution and
official punishment. We might, for instance, criticize someone who cheats on his or her spouse,
but we generally leave the solution to the individuals involved. Other matters are left to institutions
to settle; schools generally discipline students who cheat or disrupt classes, but this rarely results
in a criminal charge. Professional baseball, basketball, and football leagues have their own private
procedures for disciplining players. Most states leave the decision whether to recycle trash to the
individual and look to peer pressure to enforce this obligation.

Criminal and Civil Law


How does the criminal law differ from the civil law? The civil law is that branch of the law that
protects the individual rather than the public interest. A legal action for a civil wrong is brought by
an individual rather than by a state prosecutor. You may sue a mechanic who breaches a contract
to repair your car or bring an action against a landlord who fails to adequately heat your apart-
ment. The injury is primarily to you as an individual, and there is relatively little harm to society.
A mechanic who intentionally misleads and harms a number of innocent consumers, however,
may find himself or herself charged with criminal fraud.
Civil and criminal actions are characterized by different legal procedures. For instance, convic-
tion of a crime requires the high standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, although responsi-
bility for a civil wrong is established by the much lower standard of proof by a preponderance of
the evidence or roughly fifty-one percent certainty. The high standard of proof in criminal cases
reflects the fact that a criminal conviction may result in a loss of liberty and significant damage to
an individual’s reputation and standing in the community.9
C h a p t e r 1 T h e N a t u r e , Pu r p o se , a n d F u n c t i o n o f Cr i m i nal Law 3

The famous eighteenth-century English jurist William Blackstone summarizes the distinction
between civil and criminal law by observing that civil injuries are “an infringement . . . of the civil
rights which belong to individuals . . . public wrongs, or crimes . . . are a breach and violation of
the public rights and duties, due to the whole community . . . in its social aggregate capacity.”
Blackstone illustrates this difference by pointing out that society has little interest in whether he
sues a neighbor or emerges victorious in a land dispute. On the other hand, society has a substan-
tial investment in the arrest, prosecution, and conviction of individuals responsible for espionage,
murder, and robbery.10
The difference between a civil and criminal action is not always clear, particularly with regard
to an action for a tort, which is an injury to a person or to his or her property. Consider the
drunken driver who runs a red light and hits your car. The driver may be sued in tort for negligently
damaging you and your property as well as criminally prosecuted for reckless driving. The purpose
of the civil action is to compensate you with money for the damage to your car and for the physi-
cal and emotional injuries you have suffered. In contrast, the criminal action punishes the driver
for endangering society. Civil liability is based on a preponderance of the evidence standard, while
a criminal conviction carries a possible loss of liberty and is based on the higher standard of guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt. You may recall that former football star O.J. Simpson was acquitted of
murdering Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman but was later found guilty of wrongful death
in a civil court and ordered to compensate the victims’ families in the amount of $33.5 million.
The distinction between criminal and civil law proved immensely significant for Kansas inmate
Leroy Hendricks. Hendricks was about to be released after serving ten years in prison for molest-
ing two thirteen-year-old boys. This was only the latest episode in Hendricks’s almost thirty-year
history of indecent exposure and molestation of young children. Hendricks freely conceded that
when not confined, the only way to control his sexual urge was to “die.”
Upon learning that Hendricks was about to be released, Kansas authorities invoked the Sexually
Violent Predator Act of 1994, which authorized the institutional confinement of individuals who,
due to a “mental abnormality” or a “personality disorder,” are likely to engage in “predatory acts
of sexual violence.” Following a hearing, a jury found Hendricks to be a “sexual predator.” The
U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Hendricks’s continued commitment was a civil rather than criminal
penalty, and that Hendricks was not being unconstitutionally punished twice for the same crimi-
nal act of molestation. The Court explained that the purpose of the commitment procedure was
to detain and to treat Hendricks in order to prevent him from harming others in the future rather
than to punish him.11 Do you think that the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court makes sense?

The Purpose of Criminal Law


We have seen that the criminal law primarily protects the interests of society, and the civil law
protects the interests of the individual. The primary purpose or function of the criminal law is to
help maintain social order and stability. The Texas criminal code proclaims that the purpose of
criminal law is to “establish a system prohibitions, penalties, and correctional measures to deal
with conduct that unjustifiably and inexcusably causes or threatens harm to those individual or
public interests for which state protection is appropriate.”12 The New York criminal code sets out
the basic purposes of criminal law as follows:13

•• Harm. To prohibit conduct that unjustifiably or inexcusably causes or threatens substantial


harm to individuals as well as to society
•• Warning. To warn people both of conduct that is subject to criminal punishment and of the
severity of the punishment
•• Definition. To define the act and intent that is required for each offense
•• Seriousness. To distinguish between serious and minor offenses and to assign the appropriate
punishments
•• Punishment. To impose punishments that satisfy the demands for revenge, rehabilitation,
and deterrence of future crimes
•• Victims. To insure that the victim, the victim’s family, and the community interests are rep-
resented at trial and in imposing punishments

The next step is to understand the characteristics of a criminal act.


4 Contemporar y Criminal Law

The Principles of Criminal Law


The study of substantive criminal law involves an analysis of the definition of specific crimes
(specific part) and of the general principles that apply to all crimes (general part), such as the
defense of insanity. In our study, we will first review the general part of criminal law and then
look at specific offenses. Substantive criminal law is distinguished from criminal procedure.
Criminal procedure involves a study of the legal standards governing the detection, investigation,
and prosecution of crime and includes areas such as interrogations, search and seizure, wiretap-
ping, and the trial process. Criminal procedure is concerned with “how the law is enforced”; crimi-
nal law involves “what law is enforced.”
Professors Jerome Hall14 and Wayne R. LaFave15 identify the basic principles that compose
the general part of the criminal law. Think of the general part of the criminal law as the building
blocks that are used to construct specific offenses such as rape, murder, and robbery.

•• Criminal Act. A crime involves an act or failure to act. You cannot be punished for bad
thoughts. A criminal act is called actus reus.
•• Criminal Intent. A crime requires a criminal intent or mens rea. Criminal punishment is ordi-
narily directed at individuals who intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or negligently harm
other individuals or property.
•• Concurrence. The criminal act and criminal intent must coexist or accompany one another.
•• Causation. The defendant’s act must cause the harm required for criminal guilt, death in the
case of homicide, and the burning of a home or other structure in the case of arson.
•• Responsibility. Individuals must receive reasonable notice of the acts that are criminal so as
to make a decision to obey or to violate the law. In other words, the required criminal act
and criminal intent must be clearly stated in a statute. This concept is captured by the Latin
phrase nullum crimen sine lege, nulla poena sin lege (no crime without law, no punishment
without law).
•• Defenses. Criminal guilt is not imposed on an individual who is able to demonstrate that
his or her criminal act is justified (benefits society) or excused (the individual suffered from
a disability that prevented him or her from forming a criminal intent).

We now turn to a specific part of the criminal law to understand the various types of acts that
are punished as crimes.

Categories of Crime
Felonies and Misdemeanors
There are a number of approaches to categorizing crimes. The most significant distinction is
between a felony and a misdemeanor. A crime punishable by death or by imprisonment
for more than one year is a felony. Misdemeanors are crimes punishable by less than a year in
prison. Note that whether a conviction is for a felony or misdemeanor is determined by the
punishment provided in the statute under which an individual is convicted rather than by the
actual punishment imposed. Many states subdivide felonies and misdemeanors into several
classes or degrees to distinguish between the seriousness of criminal acts. Capital felonies are
crimes subject to the death penalty or life in prison in states that do not have the death penalty.
The term gross misdemeanor is used in some states to refer to crimes subject to between six
and twelve months in prison, whereas other misdemeanors are termed petty misdemeanors.
Several states designate a third category of crimes that are termed violations or infractions.
These tend to be acts that cause only modest social harm and carry fines. These offenses are
considered so minor that imprisonment is prohibited. This includes the violation of traffic
regulations.
Florida classifies crimes as felonies, misdemeanors, or noncriminal violations. Noncriminal
violations are primarily punishable by a fine or forfeiture of property. The following list shows
C h a p t e r 1 T h e N a t u r e , Pu r p o se , a n d F u n c t i o n o f Cr i m i nal Law 5

the categories of felonies and misdemeanors and the maximum punishment generally allowable
under Florida law:

•• Capital Felony. Death or life imprisonment without parole


•• Life Felony. Life in prison and a $15,000 fine
•• Felony in the First Degree. Thirty years in prison and a $10,000 fine
•• Felony in the Second Degree. Fifteen years in prison and a $10,000 fine
•• Felony in the Third Degree. Five years in prison and a $5,000 fine
•• Misdemeanor in the First Degree. One year in prison and a $1,000 fine
•• Misdemeanor in the Second Degree. Sixty days in prison and a $500 fine

The severity of the punishment imposed is based on the seriousness of the particular offense.
Florida, for example, punishes as a second-degree felony the recruitment of an individual for
prostitution knowing that force, fraud, or coercion will be used to cause the person to engage
in prostitution. This same act is punished as a first-degree felony in the event that the person
recruited is under fourteen years old or if death results.16

Mala In Se and Mala Prohibita


Another approach is to classify crime by “moral turpitude” (evil). Mala in se crimes are consid-
ered “inherently evil” and would be evil even if not prohibited by law. This includes murder, rape,
robbery, burglary, larceny, and arson. Mala prohibita offenses are not “inherently evil” and are
only considered wrong because they are prohibited by a statute. This includes offenses ranging
from tax evasion to carrying a concealed weapon, leaving the scene of an accident, and being
drunk and disorderly in public.
Why should we be concerned with classification schemes? A felony conviction can prevent
you from being licensed to practice various professions, bar you from being admitted to the armed
forces or joining the police, and prevent you from adopting a child or receiving various forms of
federal assistance. In some states, a convicted felon is still prohibited from voting, even following
release. The distinction between mala in se and mala prohibita is also important. For instance, the
law provides that individuals convicted of a “crime of moral turpitude” may be deported from the
United States.
There are a number of other classification schemes. The law originally categorized as infamous
those crimes that were considered to be deserving of shame or disgrace. Individuals convicted of
infamous offenses such as treason (betrayal of the nation) or offenses involving dishonesty were
historically prohibited from appearing as witnesses at a trial.

Subject Matter
This textbook is organized in accordance with the subject matter of crimes, the scheme that is fol-
lowed in most state criminal codes. There is disagreement, however, concerning the classification
of some crimes. Robbery, for instance, involves the theft of property as well as the threat or inflic-
tion of harm to the victim, and there is a debate about whether it should be considered a crime
against property or against the person. Similar issues arise in regards to burglary. Subject matter
offenses in descending order of seriousness are as follows:

•• Crimes Against the State. Treason, sedition, espionage, terrorism (Chapter 16)
•• Crimes Against the Person, Homicide. Homicide, murder, manslaughter (Chapter 11)
•• Crimes Against the Person, Sexual Offenses, and Other Crimes. Rape, assault and battery, false
imprisonment, kidnapping (Chapter 10)
•• Crimes Against Habitation. Burglary, arson, trespassing (Chapter 12)
•• Crimes Against Property. Larceny, embezzlement, false pretenses, receiving stolen property,
robbery, fraud (Chapters 13 and 14)
•• Crimes Against Public Order. Disorderly conduct, riot (Chapter 15)
•• Crimes Against the Administration of Justice. Obstruction of justice, perjury, bribery
•• Crimes Against Public Morals. Prostitution, obscenity (Chapter 15)
6 Contemporar y Criminal Law

The book also covers the general part of criminal law, including the constitutional limits
on criminal law (Chapter 2), sentencing (Chapter 3), criminal acts (Chapter 4), criminal intent
(Chapter 5), the scope of criminal liability (Chapters 6 and 7), and defenses to criminal liability
(Chapters 8 and 9).

Sources of Criminal Law


We now have covered the various categories of criminal law. The next question to consider is this:
What are the sources of the criminal law? How do we find the requirements of the criminal law?
There are a number of sources of the criminal law in the United States:

•• English and American Common Law. These are English and American judge-made laws and
English acts of Parliament.
•• State Criminal Codes. Every state has a comprehensive written set of laws on crime and
punishment.
•• Municipal Ordinances. Cities, towns, and counties are typically authorized to enact local crimi-
nal laws, generally of a minor nature. These laws regulate the city streets, sidewalks, and build-
ings and concern areas such as traffic, littering, disorderly conduct, and domestic animals.
•• Federal Criminal Code. The U.S. government has jurisdiction to enact criminal laws that are
based on the federal government’s constitutional powers, such as the regulation of inter-
state commerce.
•• State and Federal Constitutions. The U.S. Constitution defines treason and together with state
constitutions establishes limits on the power of government to enact criminal laws. A crimi-
nal statute, for instance, may not interfere with freedom of expression or religion.
•• International Treaties. International treaties signed by the United States establish crimes such
as genocide, torture, and war crimes. These treaties, in turn, form the basis of federal crimi-
nal laws punishing acts such as genocide and war crimes when Americans are involved.
These cases are prosecuted in U.S. courts.
•• Judicial Decisions. Judges write decisions explaining the meaning of criminal laws and deter-
mining whether criminal laws meet the requirements of state and federal constitutions.

At this point, we turn our attention to the common law origins of American criminal law and
to state criminal codes.

The Common Law


The English common law is the foundation of American criminal law. The origins of the common
law can be traced to the Norman conquest of England in 1066. The Norman king, William the
Conqueror, was determined to provide a uniform law for England and sent royal judges through-
out the country to settle disputes in accordance with the common customs and practices of the
country. The principles that composed this common law began to be written down in 1300 in an
effort to record the judge-made rules that should be used to decide future cases.
By 1600, a number of common law crimes had been developed, including arson, bur-
glary, larceny, manslaughter, mayhem, rape, robbery, sodomy, and suicide. These were followed
by criminal attempt, conspiracy, blasphemy, forgery, sedition, and solicitation. On occasion,
the king and Parliament issued decrees that filled the gaps in the common law, resulting in the
development of the crimes of false pretenses and embezzlement. The distinctive characteristic
of the common law is that it is for the most part the product of the decisions of judges in actual
cases.
The English civil and criminal common law was transported to the new American colonies
and formed the foundation of the colonial legal system that in turn was adopted by the thirteen
original states following the American Revolution. The English common law was also recognized
by each state subsequently admitted to the Union; the only exception was Louisiana, which fol-
lowed the French Napoleonic Code until 1805 when it embraced the common law.17
C h a p t e r 1 T h e N a t u r e , Pu r p o se , a n d F u n c t i o n o f Cr i m i nal Law 7

State Criminal Codes


States in the nineteenth century began to adopt comprehensive written criminal codes. This
movement was based on the belief that in a democracy the people should have the opportunity
to know the law. Judges in the common law occasionally punished an individual for an act
that had never before been subjected to prosecution. A defendant in a Pennsylvania case was
convicted of making obscene phone calls despite the absence of a previous prosecution for this
offense. The court explained that the “common law is sufficiently broad to punish . . . although
there may be no exact precedent, any act which directly injures or tends to injure the public.”18
There was the additional argument that the power to make laws should reside in the elected
legislative representatives of the people rather than in unelected judges. As Americans began to
express a sense of independence, there was also a strong reaction against being so clearly con-
nected to the English common law tradition, which was thought to have limited relevance to
the challenges facing America. As early as 1812, the U.S. Supreme Court proclaimed that federal
courts were required to follow the law established by Congress and were not authorized to apply
the common law.
States were somewhat slower than the federal government to abandon the common law. In a
Maine case in 1821, the accused was found guilty of dropping the dead body of a child into a river.
The defendant was convicted even though there was no statute making this a crime. The court
explained that “good morals” and “decency” all forbid this act. State legislatures reacted against
these types of decisions and began to abandon the common law in the mid-nineteenth century.
The Indiana Revised Statutes of 1852, for example, proclaims that “[c]rimes and misdemeanors
shall be defined, and punishment fixed by statutes of this State, and not otherwise.”19
Some states remain common law states, meaning that the common law may be applied
where the state legislature has not adopted a law in a particular area. The Florida criminal code
states that the “common law of England in relation to crimes, except so far as the same relates to
the mode and degrees of punishment, shall be of full force in this state where there is no existing
provision by statute on the subject.” Florida law further provides that where there is no statute,
an offense shall be punished by fine or imprisonment but that the “fine shall not exceed $500,
nor the term of imprisonment 12 months.”20 Missouri and Arizona are also examples of com-
mon law states. These states’ criminal codes, like that of Florida, contain a reception statute
that provides that the states “receive” the common law as an unwritten part of their criminal
law. California, on the other hand, is an example of a code jurisdiction. The California crimi-
nal code provides that “no act or omission . . . is criminal or punishable, except as prescribed or
authorized by this code.”21 Ohio and Utah are also code jurisdiction states. The Utah criminal
code states that common law crimes “are abolished and no conduct is a crime unless made so by
this code . . . or ordinance.”22
Professor LaFave observes that courts in common law states have recognized a number of
crimes that are not part of their criminal codes, including conspiracy, attempt, solicitation, utter-
ing gross obscenities in public, keeping a house of prostitution, cruelly killing a horse, public
inebriation, and false imprisonment.23
You also should keep in mind that the common law continues to play a role in the law of code
jurisdiction states. Most state statutes are based on the common law, and courts frequently consult
the common law to determine the meaning of terms in statutes. In the well-known California case of
Keeler v. Superior Court, the California Supreme Court looked to the common law and determined that
an 1850 state law prohibiting the killing of a “human being” did not cover the “murder of a fetus.”
The California state legislature then amended the murder statute to punish “the unlawful killing of
a human being, or a fetus.”24 Most important, our entire approach to criminal trials reflects the com-
mon law’s commitment to protecting the rights of the individual in the criminal justice process.

State Police Power


Are there limits on a state’s authority to pass criminal laws? Could a state declare that it is a crime
to possess fireworks on July Fourth? State governments possess the broad power to promote the
public health, safety, and welfare of the residents of the state. This wide-ranging police power
includes the “duty . . . to protect the well-being and tranquility of a community” and to “prohibit
8 Contemporar y Criminal Law

acts or things reasonably thought to bring evil or harm to its people.”25 An example of the far-
reaching nature of the state police power is the U.S. Supreme Court’s upholding of the right of a
village to prohibit more than two unrelated people from occupying a single home. The Supreme
Court proclaimed that the police power includes the right to “lay out zones where family val-
ues, youth values, the blessings of quiet seclusion, and clean air make the area a sanctuary for
people.”26
State legislatures in formulating the content of criminal codes have been profoundly influ-
enced by the Model Penal Code.

The Model Penal Code


People from other countries often ask how students can study the criminal law of the United
States, a country with fifty states and a federal government. The fact that there is a significant
degree of agreement in the definition of crimes in state codes is due to a large extent to the Model
Penal Code.
In 1962, the American Law Institute (ALI), a private group of lawyers, judges, and scholars,
concluded after several years of study that despite our common law heritage, state criminal stat-
utes radically varied in their definition of crimes and were difficult to understand and poorly
organized. The ALI argued that the quality of justice should not depend on the state in which
an individual was facing trial and issued a multivolume set of model criminal laws, The Proposed
Official Draft of the Model Penal Code. The Model Penal Code is purely advisory and is intended to
encourage all fifty states to adopt a single uniform approach to the criminal law. The statutes are
accompanied by a commentary that explains how the Model Penal Code differs from existing
state statutes. Roughly thirty-seven states have adopted some of the provisions of the Model Penal
Code, although no state has adopted every single model law. The states that most closely follow
the code are New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Oregon. As you read this book, you may find
it interesting to compare the Model Penal Code to the common law and to state statutes.27
This book primarily discusses state criminal law. It is important to remember that we also have
a federal system of criminal law in the United States.

Federal Statutes
The United States has a federal system of government. The states granted various powers to the
federal government that are set forth in the U.S. Constitution. This includes the power to regulate
interstate commerce, to declare war, to provide for the national defense, to coin money, to collect
taxes, to operate the post office, and to regulate immigration. The Congress is entitled to make
“all Laws which shall be necessary and proper” for fulfilling these responsibilities. The states retain
those powers that are not specifically granted to the federal government. The Tenth Amendment
to the Constitution states that the powers “not delegated to the United States by the Constitution,
nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.”
The Constitution specifically authorizes Congress to punish the counterfeiting of U.S. cur-
rency, piracy and felonies committed on the high seas, and crimes against the “Law of Nations”
as well as to make rules concerning the conduct of warfare. These criminal provisions are to be
enforced by a single Supreme Court and by additional courts established by Congress.
The federal criminal code compiles the criminal laws adopted by the U.S. Congress. This
includes laws punishing acts such as tax evasion, mail and immigration fraud, bribery in obtain-
ing a government contract, and the knowing manufacture of defective military equipment. The
Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution provides that federal law is superior to a state law
within those areas that are the preserve of the national government. This is termed the preemp-
tion doctrine.
Several recent court decisions have held that federal criminal laws have unconstitutionally
encroached on areas reserved for state governments. This reflects a trend toward limiting the
federal power to enact criminal laws. For instance, the U.S. government, with the Interstate
Commerce Clause, has interpreted its power to regulate interstate commerce as providing the
authority to criminally punish harmful acts that involve the movement of goods or individuals
across state lines. An obvious example is the interstate transportation of stolen automobiles.
In the past few years, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled several of these federal laws unconsti-
tutional based on the fact that the activities did not clearly affect interstate commerce or involve
C h a p t e r 1 T h e N a t u r e , Pu r p o se , a n d F u n c t i o n o f Cr i m i nal Law 9

the use of interstate commerce. In 1995, the Supreme Court ruled in United States v. Lopez that
Congress violated the Constitution by adopting the Gun Free School Zones Act of 1990, which
made it a crime to have a gun in a local school zone. The fact that the gun may have been trans-
ported across state lines was too indirect a connection with interstate commerce on which to base
federal jurisdiction.28
In 2000, the Supreme Court also ruled unconstitutional the U.S. government’s prosecution of
an individual in Indiana who was alleged to have set fire to a private residence. The federal law
made it a crime to maliciously damage or destroy, by means of fire or an explosive, any building
used in interstate or foreign commerce or in any activity affecting interstate or foreign commerce.
The Supreme Court ruled that there must be a direct connection between a building and inter-
state commerce and rejected the government’s contention that it is sufficient that a building is
constructed of supplies or serviced by electricity that moved across state lines or that the owner’s
insurance payments are mailed to a company located in another state. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
explained that this would mean that “every building in the land” would fall within the reach of
federal laws on arson, trespass, and burglary.29
In 2006, in Oregon v. Gonzalez, the Supreme Court held that U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft
lacked the authority to prevent Oregon physicians acting under the state’s Death With Dignity Law
from prescribing lethal drugs to terminally ill patients who are within six months of dying.30
The sharing of power between the federal and state governments is termed dual sovereignty.
An interesting aspect of dual sovereignty is that it is constitutionally permissible to prosecute a
defendant for the same act at both the state and federal levels so long as the criminal charges
slightly differ. You might recall in 1991 that Rodney King, an African American, was stopped by
the Los Angeles police. King resisted and eventually was subdued, wrestled to the ground, beaten,
and handcuffed by four officers. The officers were acquitted by an all-Caucasian jury in a state
court in Simi Valley, California, leading to widespread protest and disorder in Los Angeles. The
federal government responded by bringing the four officers to trial for violating King’s civil right
to be arrested in a reasonable fashion. Two officers were convicted and sentenced to thirty months
in federal prison and two were acquitted. Later in this chapter, you will be asked to decide whether
this “double prosecution” is fair.
We have seen that the state and federal governments possess the power to enact criminal laws.
The federal power is restricted by the provisions of the U.S. Constitution that define the limits on
governmental power.

Constitutional Limitations
The U.S. Constitution and individual state constitutions establish limits and standards for the
criminal law. The U.S. Constitution, as we shall see in Chapter 2, requires that

•• a state or local law may not regulate an area that is reserved to the federal government. A
federal law may not encroach upon state power.
•• a law may only infringe upon the fundamental civil and political rights of individuals in
compelling circumstances.
•• a law must be clearly written and provide notice to citizens and to the police of the conduct
that is prohibited.
•• a law must be nondiscriminatory and may not impose cruel and unusual punishment. A
law also may not be retroactive and punish acts that were not crimes at the time that they
were committed.

The ability of legislators to enact criminal laws is also limited by public opinion. The American
constitutional system is a democracy. Politicians are fully aware that they must face elections and
that they may be removed from office in the event that they support an unpopular law. As we
learned during the unsuccessful effort to ban the sale of alcohol during the prohibition era in the
early twentieth century, the government will experience difficulties in imposing an unpopular law
on the public.
Of course, the democratic will of the majority is subject to constitutional limitations. A classic
example is the Supreme Court’s rulings that popular federal statutes prohibiting and punishing
flag burning and desecration compose an unconstitutional violation of freedom of speech.31
10 Contemporar y Criminal Law

Crime in the News


In 1996, California became one of twelve states to authorize the The U.S. Supreme Court, in Gonzalez v. Raich in 2005,
use of marijuana for medical purposes. (The states are Alaska, held that the federal prohibition on the possession of marijuana
Colorado, Hawaii, Maine, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, would be undermined by exempting marijuana possession in
Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington. Maryland California and other states from federal criminal enforcement.
exempts medical marijuana users from jail sentences.) The Supreme Court explained that the cultivation of marijuana
California voters passed Proposition 215, the under California’s medical marijuana law, although clearly a
Compassionate Use Act of 1996, which is intended to local activity, frustrated the federal government’s effort to con-
ensure that “seriously ill” residents of California are able trol the shipment of marijuana across state lines, because
to obtain marijuana. The act provides an exemption from medical marijuana inevitably would find its way into interstate
criminal prosecution for doctors who, in turn, may autho- commerce, increase the nationwide supply, and drive down
rize patients and primary caregivers to possess or cultivate the price of the illegal drug. There was also a risk that com-
marijuana for medical purposes. The California legislation pletely healthy individuals in California would manage to be
is directly at odds with the federal Controlled Substances fraudulently certified by a doctor to be in need of medical mari-
Act, which declares it a crime to manufacture, distribute, juana. Three of the nine Supreme Court judges dissented from
or possess marijuana. There are more than 100,000 medi- the majority opinion. Justice Sandra Day O’Connor observed
cal marijuana users in California, and roughly one-tenth of that the majority judgment “stifles an express choice by some
one percent of the population uses medical marijuana in the States, concerned for the lives and liberties of their people, to
states that collect information on medical marijuana users. regulate medical marijuana differently.”
Angel Raich and Diane Monson are two California res- Following the decision, Angel Raich urged the federal
idents who suffer from severe medical disabilities. Their government to have some “compassion and have some
doctors have found that marijuana is the only drug that is heart” and not to “use taxpayer dollars to come in and lock
able to alleviate their pain and suffering. Raich’s doctor us up . . . we are using this medicine because it is saving our
goes so far as to claim that Angel’s pain is so intense that lives.” She asked why the federal government was trying to
she might die if deprived of marijuana. Monson cultivates kill her. Opponents of medical marijuana defend the Supreme
her own marijuana, and Raich relies on two caregivers who Court’s decision and explain that individuals should look to
provide her with California-grown marijuana at no cost. traditional medical treatment rather than being misled into
On August 15, 2000, agents from the federal Drug thinking that marijuana is an effective therapy. They also
Enforcement Administration (DEA) raided Monson’s home argue that marijuana is a highly addictive drug that could lead
and destroyed all six of her marijuana plants. The DEA agents individuals to experiment with even more harmful narcotics.
disregarded objections from the Butte County Sheriff’s There were over 820,000 arrests for possession or
Department and the local California District Attorney’s Office sale of marijuana in 2006, most of which were carried out by
that Monson’s possession of marijuana was perfectly legal. state authorities. The question is whether the federal authori-
Monson and Raich, along with several doctors and patients, ties will use the Supreme Court decision as a justification
refused to accept the destruction of the marijuana plants and for arresting individuals growing or possessing medical mari-
asked the U.S. Supreme Court to rule on the constitutionality of juana. The federal government has adopted a policy of target-
the federal government’s refusal to exempt medical marijuana ing individuals in California accused of growing 1,000 plants
users from criminal prosecution and punishment. The case or more and has raided over sixty marijuana dispensaries in
was supported by the California Medical Association and the the state. One California medical marijuana grower who had
Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. Raich suffers from severe been prosecuted and convicted by the federal government
chronic pain stemming from fibromyalgia, endometriosis, was released after serving two years of a ten-year sentence
scoliosis, uterine fibroid tumors, rotator cuff syndrome, an for growing medical marijuana plants pending the outcome in
inoperable brain tumor, seizures, life-threatening wasting syn- Gonzalez v. Raich. After the decision, he was ordered back
drome, and constant nausea. She also experiences extreme to prison. In 2007, another defendant had his ten-year sen-
chemical sensitivities that result in violent allergic reactions tence affirmed by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Federal
to virtually every pharmaceutical drug. Raich was confined to judges in a series of cases have refused to permit witnesses
a wheelchair before reluctantly deciding to smoke marijuana, a or defendants to raise the defense that the medical use of
decision that led to her enjoying a fairly normal life. marijuana is lawful under California law.
A doctor recommended that Monson use marijuana to The California Attorney General, Bill Lockyer, observed
treat severe chronic back pain and spasms. She alleges that there is a “vast philosophical difference” between
that marijuana alleviates the pain that she describes as the federal government and Californians on the “rights of
comparable to an uncontrollable cramp. Monson claims patients to have access to the medicine they need to sur-
that other drugs have proven ineffective or resulted in vive and lead healthier lives.” The early indications are
nausea and create the risk of severe injuries to her kid- that President Barack Obama will halt federal prosecu-
neys and liver. The marijuana reportedly reduces the fre- tions of individuals whose possession or distribution of
quency of Monson’s spasms and enables her to continue medical marijuana complies with state law.
to work. Where do you stand on the medical marijuana controversy?

Consider the following factual scenario that is taken from the U.S. Supreme Court’s descrip-
tion of the events surrounding the beating of Rodney King.32
C h a p t e r 1 T h e N a t u r e , Pu r p o se , a n d F u n c t i o n o f Cr i m i nal Law 11

You Decide 1.1 On the evening of March 2, 1991, “oops” and “I haven’t [sic] beaten anyone this bad in a long
Rodney King and two of his friends sat time.” Koon sent a message to the police station that said: “Unit
in King’s wife’s car in Altadena, just had a big time use of force. . . . Tased and beat the suspect
California, a city in Los Angeles County, of CHP pursuit big time.” King was taken to a hospital where he
and drank malt liquor for a number of was treated for a fractured leg, multiple facial fractures, and
hours. Then, with King driving, they left numerous bruises and contusions. Learning that King worked at
Altadena via a major freeway. King was intoxicated. California Dodger Stadium, Powell said to King: “We played a little ball
Highway Patrol (CHP) officers observed King’s car traveling at tonight, didn’t we Rodney? . . . You know, we played a little ball,
a speed they estimated to be in excess of 100 mph. The offi- we played a little hardball tonight, we hit quite a few home
cers followed King with red lights and sirens activated and runs. . . . Yes, we played a little ball and you lost and we won.”
ordered him by loudspeaker to pull over, but he continued to Koon, Powell, Briseno, and Wind were tried in California
drive. The Highway Patrol officers called on the radio for help. state court on charges of assault with a deadly weapon and
Units of the Los Angeles Police Department joined in the pur- excessive use of force by a police officer. The officers were
suit, one of them manned by petitioner Laurence Powell and acquitted of all charges, with the exception of one assault
his trainee, Timothy Wind. (The officers are all Caucasian; charge against Powell that resulted in a hung jury. (The jury was
King is African American. King later explained that he fled composed of ten Caucasians, one Hispanic, and one Asian
because he feared that he would be returned to prison after American.) The verdicts touched off widespread rioting in Los
having been released four months earlier following a year Angeles. More than 40 people were killed in the riots, more
spent behind bars for robbery.) than 2,000 were injured, and nearly $1 billion in property was
King left the freeway, and after a chase of about eight destroyed. (Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley declared that there
miles, stopped at an entrance to a recreation area. The offi- “appears to be a dangerous trend of racially motivated inci-
cers ordered King and his two passengers to exit the car and dents running through at least some segments of the police
to assume a felony prone position—that is, to lie on their department,” and President George H.W. Bush announced in
stomachs with legs spread and arms behind their backs. May that the verdict had left him with a deep sense of personal
King’s two friends complied. King, too, got out of the car but frustration and anger and that he was ordering the Justice
did not lie down. Petitioner Stacey Koon arrived, at once fol- Department to initiate a prosecution against the officers.)
lowed by Ted Briseno and Roland Solano. All were officers of On August 4, 1992, a federal grand jury indicted the four
the Los Angeles Police Department, and as sergeant, Koon officers, charging them with violating King’s constitutional
took charge. The officers again ordered King to assume the rights under color of law. Powell, Briseno, and Wind were
felony prone position. King got on his hands and knees but did charged with willful use of unreasonable force in arresting
not lie down. Officers Powell, Wind, Briseno, and Solano tried King. Koon was charged with willfully permitting the other offi-
to force King down, but King resisted and became combative, cers to use unreasonable force during the arrest. After a trial
so the officers retreated. Koon then fired Taser darts in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, the
(designed to stun a combative suspect) into King. jury convicted Koon and Powell but acquitted Wind and
The events that occurred next were captured on video- Briseno. Koon and Powell were sentenced to thirty months in
tape by a bystander. As the videotape begins, it shows that prison. This jury was comprised of nine Caucasians, two
King rose from the ground and charged toward Officer Powell. African Americans, and one Hispanic. King later won a $3.8
Powell took a step and used his baton to strike King on the million verdict from the City of Los Angeles. He used some of
side of his head. King fell to the ground. From the eighteenth the money to establish a rap record business.
to the thirtieth second on the videotape, King attempted to The issue to consider is whether Officers King and Powell
rise, but Powell and Wind each struck him with their batons to may be prosecuted and acquitted in California state court and
prevent him from doing so. From the thirty-fifth to the fifty-first then prosecuted in federal court. This seems to violate the
second, Powell administered repeated blows to King’s lower prohibition on double jeopardy in the Fifth Amendment to the
extremities; one of the blows fractured King’s leg. At the fifty- U.S. Constitution, which states that individuals shall not be
fifth second, Powell struck King on the chest, and King rolled “twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.” Double jeopardy means
over and lay prone. At that point, the officers stepped back that an individual should not be prosecuted more than once
and observed King for about ten seconds. Powell began to for the same offense. Without this protection, the government
reach for his handcuffs. (At the sentencing phase, the district could subject people to a series of trials in an effort to obtain
court found that Powell no longer perceived King to be a threat a conviction.
at this point.) At one-minute-five-seconds (1:05) on the video- It may surprise you to learn that judges have held that the
tape, Briseno, in the District Court’s words, “stomped” on dual sovereignty doctrine permits the U.S. government to pros-
King’s upper back or neck. King’s body writhed in response. At ecute an individual under federal law who has been acquitted
1:07, Powell and Wind again began to strike King with a series on the state level. The theory is that the state and federal
of baton blows, and Wind kicked him in the upper thoracic or governments are completely different entities and that state
cervical area six times until 1:26. At about 1:29, King put his government is primarily concerned with punishing police offi-
hands behind his back and was handcuffed. Where the baton cers and with protecting residents against physical attack,
blows fell and the intentions of King and the officers at vari- while the federal government is concerned with safeguarding
ous points were contested at trial, but, as noted, petitioners’ the civil liberties of all Americans. Each of these entities pro-
guilt has been established. vides a check on the other to ensure fairness for citizens. The
Powell radioed for an ambulance. He sent two messages evidence introduced in the two prosecutions to establish the
over a communications network to the other officers that said police officers’ guilt in the King case was virtually identical,

(Continued)
12 Contemporar y Criminal Law

(Continued)
and the federal prosecution likely was brought in response to trials? As the attorney general to the United States, would you
political pressure. On the other hand, the federal government have advised President George H.W. Bush to bring federal
historically has acted to prevent unfair verdicts, such as the charges against the officers following their acquittal by a
acquittal of members of the Ku Klux Klan charged with killing California jury?
civil rights workers during the 1960s.
Do you believe that it was fair to subject the Los Angeles You can find the answer at
police officers to the expense and emotional stress of two www.sagepub.com/lippmanccl2e

Chapter Summary
Criminal law is the foundation of the criminal justice system. The law defines the acts that may lead to arrest, trial,
and incarceration. We typically think about crime as involving violent conduct, but in fact a broad variety of acts are
defined as crimes.
Criminal law is best defined as conduct that, if shown to have taken place, will result in the “formal and solemn
pronouncement of the moral condemnation of the community.” Civil law is distinguished from criminal law by the
fact that it primarily protects the interests of the individual rather than the interests of society.
The purpose of criminal law is to prohibit conduct that causes harm or threatens harm to the individual and to the
public interests, to warn people of the acts that are subject to criminal punishment, to define criminal acts and intent,
to distinguish between serious and minor offenses, to punish offenders, and to ensure that the interests of victims and
the public are represented at trial and in the punishment of offenders.
In analyzing individual crimes, we will be concerned with several basic concerns that compose the general part of
the criminal law. A crime is composed of a concurrence between a criminal act (actus reus) and criminal intent (mens rea)
and the causation of a social harm. Individuals must be provided with notice of the acts that are criminally condemned
in order to have the opportunity to obey or to violate the law. Individuals must also be given the opportunity at trial
to present defenses (justifications and excuses) to a criminal charge.
The criminal law distinguishes between felonies and misdemeanors. A crime punishable by death or by imprison-
ment for more than one year is a felony. Other offenses are misdemeanors. Offenses are further divided into capital and
other grades of felonies and into gross and petty misdemeanors. A third level of offenses are violations or infractions,
acts that are punishable by fines.
Another approach is to classify crime in terms of “moral turpitude.” Mala in se crimes are considered “inherently
evil,” and mala prohibita crimes are not inherently evil and are only considered wrong because they are prohibited by
statute.
Our textbook categorizes crimes in accordance with the subject matter of the offense, the scheme that is followed
in most state criminal codes. This includes crimes against the state, crimes against the person, crimes against habita-
tion, crimes against property, crimes against public order, and crimes against the administration of justice.
There are a number of sources of American criminal law. These include the common law, state and federal crimi-
nal codes, the U.S. and state constitutions, international treaties, and judicial decisions. The English common law
was transported to the United States and formed the foundation for the American criminal statutes adopted in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Some states continue to apply the common law in those instances in which the
state legislature has not adopted a criminal statute. In code jurisdiction states, however, crimes only are punishable if
incorporated into law.
States possess broad police powers to legislate for the public health, safety, and welfare of the residents of the state.
The drafting of state criminal statutes has been heavily influenced by the American Law Institute’s Model Penal Code,
which has helped ensure a significant uniformity in the content of criminal codes.
The United States has a system of dual sovereignty in which the state governments have provided the federal gov-
ernment with the authority to legislate various areas of criminal law. The Supremacy Clause provides that federal law
takes precedence over state law in the areas that the U.S. Constitution explicitly reserves to the national government.
There is a trend toward strictly limiting the criminal law power of the federal government. The U.S. Supreme Court, for
example, has ruled that the federal government has unconstitutionally employed the Interstate Commerce Clause to
extend the reach of federal criminal legislation to the possession of a firearm adjacent to schools.
The authority of the state and federal governments to adopt criminal statutes is limited by the provisions of fed-
eral and state constitutions. For instance, laws must be drafted in a clear and nondiscriminatory fashion and must not
C h a p t e r 1 T h e N a t u r e , Pu r p o se , a n d F u n c t i o n o f Cr i m i nal Law 13

impose retroactive or cruel or unusual punishment. The federal and state governments possess the authority to enact
criminal legislation only within their separate spheres of constitutional power.

Chapter Review Questions


  1. Define a crime.
  2. Distinguish between criminal and civil law. Distinguish between a criminal act and a tort.
  3. What is the purpose of criminal law?
  4. Is there a difference between criminal law and criminal procedure? Distinguish between the specific and general part of the crimi-
nal law.
  5. List the basic principles that compose the general part of criminal law.
  6. Distinguish between felonies, misdemeanors, capital felonies, gross and petty misdemeanors, and violations.
  7. What is the difference between mala in se and mala prohibita crimes?
  8. Discuss the development of the common law. What do we mean by common law states and code jurisdiction states?
  9. Discuss the nature and importance of the state police power.
10. Why is the Model Penal Code significant?
11. What is the legal basis for federal criminal law? Define the preemption doctrine and dual sovereignty. What is the significance of
the Interstate Commerce Clause?
12. What are the primary sources of criminal law? How does the U.S. Constitution limit the criminal law?
13. Why is understanding the criminal law important in the study of the criminal justice system?

Legal Terminology
capital felony federal criminal code petty misdemeanor

civil law felony police power

code jurisdiction gross misdemeanor preemption doctrine

common law crimes infamous crimes reception statutes

common law states infractions substantive criminal law

crime Interstate Commerce Clause Supremacy Clause

criminal procedure mala in se tort

defendant mala prohibita violation

double jeopardy misdemeanor

dual sovereignty Model Penal Code

Criminal Law on the Web


Log on to the Web-based student study site at www.sagepub maintained by the Cornell University Law School, and find
.com/lippmanccl2e to assist you in completing the Criminal the criminal law statutes of the state in which you live. You
Law on the Web exercises, as well as for additional features also might want to go to www.lawsource.com.
such as podcasts, Web quizzes, and audio/video links. 2. Learn more about the Rodney King case. Would you have
convicted the police officers?

1. A number of sites contain collections of state and federal laws 3. You may also want to ask yourself whether it is possible for an
and links to state criminal cases. As a first step, go to www innocent individual to be convicted. The Innocence Project
.findlaw.com, click on Criminal Law, and read about the works to exonerate the wrongfully convicted. Why are indi-
steps in a criminal case. This is also a good site at which to viduals wrongfully convicted?
find the definitions of various crimes. Then explore the site 4. Read about medical marijuana laws.
14 Contemporar y Criminal Law

Bibliography
Joshua Dressler, Understanding Criminal Law, 3rd ed. (New York: Jerome Hall, General Principles of Criminal Law, 2nd ed.
Lexis, 2001), pp. 1–32. A good introduction to the nature of (Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill, 1960), pp. 1–359. A
criminal law and to the common law and statutes. detailed discussion of the theory of criminal law and the
George Fletcher, Rethinking Criminal Law (New York: Oxford basic elements of a crime.
University Press, 2000). A challenging discussion of the his- Wayne LaFave, Criminal Law, 3rd ed. (St. Paul, MN: West
tory and philosophy of criminal law. Publishing, 2000), pp. 1–198. A comprehensive discussion
Lawrence M. Friedman, Crime and Punishment in American History of the characteristics, purpose, classification, and common
(New York: Basic Books, 1993). A history of criminal justice law foundation of criminal law.
in the United States. Rollin M. Perkins and Ronald N. Boyce, Criminal Law, 3rd ed.
Hyman Gross, A Theory of Criminal Justice (New York: Oxford (Mineola, NY: Foundation Press, 1982), pp. 1–46. A sophisti-
University Press, 1979). A highly sophisticated discussion cated analysis of the purpose, definition, and classification of
of the philosophical basis of criminal law. criminal law and development of the common law.
Appendix
Reading and Briefing Cases

Introduction
A unique aspect of studying criminal law is that you have the opportunity to read actual court decisions. Reading cases
will likely be a new experience, and although you may encounter some initial frustrations, in my experience students
fairly quickly master the techniques of legal analysis.
The case method was introduced in 1870 by Harvard law professor Christopher Columbus Langdell and is the
primary method of instruction in nearly all American law schools. This approach is based on the insight that students
learn the law most effectively when they study actual cases. Langdell encouraged instructors to employ a question and
answer classroom technique termed the Socratic method. The most challenging aspect of this approach involves
posing hypothetical or fictitious examples that require students to apply the case material to new factual situations.
The study of cases assists you to

•• understand the principles of criminal law,


•• improve your skills in critical reading and thinking,
•• acquaint yourself with legal vocabulary and procedures,
•• appreciate how judges make decisions, and
•• learn to apply the law to the facts.

The cases in this textbook have been edited to highlight the most important points. Some nonessential material
has been omitted to assist you in reading and understanding the material. You may want to read the entire, unedited
case in the library or online.
The cases you read are the products of an adversary system in which the prosecutors and defense attorneys present
evidence and examine witnesses at trial. The evaluation of the facts is the responsibility of the jury or, in the absence of
a jury, the judge. A case heard by a judge without a jury is termed a bench trial. The adversary system is premised on
the belief that truth will emerge from the clash between two dedicated attorneys “zealously presenting their cause.”
The lowest courts in the judicial hierarchy are trial courts. The proceedings are recorded in trial transcripts that
recite the selection of jurors, testimony of witnesses, arguments of lawyers, and rulings by the judge. Individuals con-
victed before a trial court may appeal the guilty verdict to appellate (or appeal) courts. The cases you read in this
book in most instances are the decisions issued by appellate court judges reviewing a guilty verdict entered against a
defendant at trial. These reviews are based on transcripts and briefs. Briefs are lengthy written arguments submitted
to the court by the prosecution and defense. The two sides may also have the opportunity to engage in an oral argu-
ment before the appellate court. In issuing a decision, the appellate court will accept as established those facts that are
most favorable to the party that prevailed at the trial court level.
Defendants appealing a verdict by a trial court ordinarily file an appeal with the intermediate court of appeals,
which in many states provides the defendant with a new trial or trial de novo. The losing party may then file an addi-
tional appeal to the state supreme court. The party who is appealing is termed the appellant, and the second name is
typically the party against whom the appeal is filed or the appellee. You also will notice the insertion of “v.” between
the names of the parties, which is an abbreviation for the Latin versus.

15
16 C hapte r 1 Th e N a t u r e , P u r p o s e , a n d Fu n c t i o n o f C r i m i n a l L a w

Individuals who have been convicted and have exhausted their state appeals may file a constitutional challenge
or collateral attack against their conviction in federal court. The first name in the title is the name of the prisoner
bringing the case, or the petitioner, and the second name, or respondent, is typically the warden or individual in
charge of the prison in which the petitioner is incarcerated.
In a collateral attack, an inmate bringing the action files a petition for habeas corpus review requesting a federal
court to issue an order requiring the state to demonstrate that the petitioner is lawfully incarcerated. The ability of a
petitioner to compel the state to demonstrate that he or she has been lawfully detained is one of the most important
safeguards for individual liberty and is guaranteed in Article I, Section 9, Clause 2 of the U.S. Constitution.
Federal courts may also preside over criminal cases charging a defendant with a violation of a federal statute. There
are three levels of federal courts. First, there are ninety-four district courts, which are the trial courts. Appeals may be
taken to the thirteen courts of appeals and ultimately to the U.S. Supreme Court. The U.S. Supreme Court generally
may choose whether to review a case. Four of the nine judges must vote to grant a writ of certiorari or an order to
review the decision of a lower court.

The Structure of Cases


A case is divided into an introduction and judicial opinion. These two sections have several components that you should
keep in mind.

Introduction
The initial portion of a case is divided into title, citation, and identification of the judge.

Title
Cases are identified by the names of the parties involved in the litigation. At the trial level, this typically involves
the prosecuting authority (a city, county, state, or the federal government) and the name of the defendant. On direct
appeals, the first name refers to the appellant who is bringing the appeal and the second to the appellee who is defend-
ing against the appeal. On collateral attack, remember that the parties are termed petitioners and respondents. You will
notice that judicial decisions often utilize a shorthand version of a case and refer only to one of the parties, much like
calling someone by his or her first or last name.

Citation
Immediately following the names you will find the citation that directs you to the book or legal reporter where
you can find the case in a law library. Increasingly, cases are also becoming available online. The standard form
for citations of cases, statutes, and law journals is contained in The Bluebook published by the Harvard Law Review
Association.

Judge
The name of the judge who wrote the opinion typically appears at the beginning of the case. An opinion written by
a respected judge may prove particularly influential with other courts. The respect accorded to a judge may also be
diminished if his or her decisions have frequently been reversed by appellate courts.

Outline
The full, unedited cases in legal reporters typically begin with a list of numbered paragraphs or head notes that outline
the main legal points in the case. There is also a summary of the case and of the decisions of other courts that have
heard the case. These outlines have been omitted from the edited cases reprinted in this book.

Judicial Opinion
The judge’s legal discussion is referred to as the opinion, judgment, or decision. The opinion is usually divided into
history, facts, and law. These component parts are not always neatly distinguished, and you may have to organize the
material in your mind as you read the case.

History
The initial portion of a case typically provides a summary of the decisions of the lower courts that previously consid-
ered the case and the statutes involved.
Ap p e n d i x R e a d i n g a n d B r i ef i ng Cas es 17

Facts
Each case is based on a set of facts that present a question to be answered by the judge. This question, for instance,
may involve whether a defendant acted in self-defense or whether an individual cleaning his or her rifle intention-
ally or accidentally killed a friend. This question is termed the issue. The challenge is to separate the relevant from the
irrelevant facts. A relevant fact is a fact that assists in establishing the existence or nonexistence of a material fact or
element of the crime that the government is required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt at trial. For instance, in the
gun example, whether the defendant possessed a motive to kill the victim would be relevant in establishing the mate-
rial element of whether the defendant possessed a specific intent to kill.

Law
The judge then applies the legal rule to the facts and reaches a holding or decision. The reasoning is the explanation
offered by the judge for the holding. Judges also often include comments and observations (in Latin obiter dicta, or
comments from the bench) on a wide range of legal and factual concerns that provide important background but may
not be central to the holding. These comments may range from legal history to a discussion of a judge’s philosophy of
punishment.
Judges typically rely on precedents or the holdings of other courts. Precedent or “stare decisis et no quieta
movere” literally translates as “to stand by precedent and to stand by settled points.” The court may follow a precedent
or point out that the case at hand should be distinguished from the precedent and calls for a different rule, which is
called a distinguishing precedent.
Appellate courts are typically composed of a multiple judge panel consisting of three or more judges,
depending on the level of the court. The judges typically meet and vote on a case and issue a majority opinion,
which is recognized as the holding in the case. Judges in the majority may choose to write a concurring opinion
supporting the majority, which is typically based on slightly different grounds. On occasion, a majority of judges
agree on the outcome of a case but are unable to reach a consensus on the reasoning. In these instances there
is typically a plurality opinion as well as one or more concurring opinions. In cases in which a court issues a
plurality opinion, the decisions of the various judges in the majority must be closely examined to determine the
precise holding of the case. You may encounter a per curiam opinion. This is an opinion that is authored by all
the judges on the court
A judge in the minority has the discretion to write a dissenting opinion. Other judges in the minority may also
issue separate opinions or join the dissenting opinion of another judge. In those instances in which a court is closely
divided, the dissenting opinion with the passage of time may come to reflect the view of a majority of the members
of the court. The dissent may also influence the majority opinion. The judges in the majority may feel compelled to
answer the claims of the dissent or to compromise in order to attract judges who may be sympathetic to the dissent.
You should keep in mind that cases carry different degrees of authority. The decisions of the Ohio Supreme Court
possess binding authority on lower courts within Ohio. The decision of a lower-level Ohio court that fails to follow
precedent will likely be appealed by the losing party and reversed by the appellate court. The decisions of the Ohio
Supreme Court, however, are not binding on lower courts outside of Ohio, but may be considered by these other tribu-
nals to possess persuasive authority. Of course, precedents are not written in stone, and courts will typically adjust
the law to meet new challenges.
As you read the edited cases reprinted in this textbook, you will notice that the cases are divided into various sections. The
“facts” of the case and the “issue” to be decided by the court are typically followed by the court’s “reasoning” or justification and
“holding” or decision. A number of questions appear at the end of the case to help you understand the opinion.

Briefing a Case
Your instructor may ask you to brief or summarize the main points of the cases reprinted in this textbook. A student
brief is a concise, shorthand written description of the case and is intended to assist you in understanding and organizing
the material and in preparing for class and examinations. A brief generally includes several standard features. These, of
course, are only broad guidelines, and there are differing opinions on the proper form of a brief. Bear in mind that a
particular case that you are reading may not be easily reduced to a standard format.

  1. The Name of the Case and the Year the Case Was Decided. The name of the case will help you in organizing your
class notes. Including the year of decision places the case in historical context and alerts you to the possibility
that an older decision may have been revised in light of modern circumstances.
18 C hapte r 1 Th e N a t u r e , P u r p o s e , a n d Fu n c t i o n o f C r i m i n a l L a w

  2. The State or Federal Court Deciding the Case and the Judge Writing the Decision. This will assist you in determining
the place of the court in the judicial hierarchy and whether the decision constitutes a precedent to be followed
by lower-level courts.
  3. Facts. Write down the relevant facts. You should think of this as a story that has a factual beginning and conclu-
sion. The best approach is to put the facts into your own words. Pay particular attention to
a. the background facts leading to the defendant’s criminal conduct;
b. the defendant’s criminal act, intent, and motives; and
c. the relevant facts as distinguished from the irrelevant facts.

  4. Criminal Charge. Identify the crime with which the defendant is charged and the text of the relevant criminal
statute.

  5. The Issue That the Court Is Addressing in the Case. This is customarily in the form of a question in the brief and
typically is introduced by the word “whether.” For instance, the issue might be “whether section 187 of the
California criminal code punishing the unlawful killing of a human being includes the death of a fetus.”

  6. Holding. Write down the legal principle formulated by the court to answer the question posed by the issue. This
requires only a statement that the “California Supreme Court ruled that section 187 does not include a fetus.”

  7. Reasoning. State the reasons that the court provides for the holding. Note the key precedents the court cites and
relies on in reaching its decision. Ask yourself whether the court’s reasoning is logical and persuasive.

  8. Disposition. An appellate court may affirm and uphold the decision of a lower court or reverse the lower court
judgment. In addition, a lower court’s decision may be reversed in part and affirmed in part. Lastly the appellate
court may reverse the lower court and remand or return the case for additional judicial action. Take the time to
understand the precise impact of the court decision.

  9. Concurring and Dissenting Opinions. Note the arguments offered by judges in concurring and dissenting
opinions.

10. Public Policy and Psychology. Consider the impact of the decision on society and the criminal justice system.
In considering a court decision, do not overlook the psychological, social, and political factors that may have
affected the judge’s decision.

11. Personal Opinion. Sketch your own judicial opinion and note whether you agree with the holding of the case
and the reasoning of the court.

Approaching the Case


You will most likely develop a personal approach to reading and briefing cases. You might want to keep the following
points in mind:

•• Skim the case. This will enable you to develop a sense of the issue, facts, and holding of the case.
•• Read the case slowly a second time. You may find it helpful in the beginning to read the case out loud and write
notes in the margin.
•• Write down the relevant facts in your own words.
•• Identify the relevant facts, issues, reasoning, and holding. You should not merely mechanically copy the language of the
case. Most instructors suggest that you express the material in your own words in order to improve your under-
standing. You should pay careful attention to the legal language. For instance, there is a significant difference
between a statute that provides that an individual who “reasonably believes” that he or she is being attacked is
entitled to self-defense, and a statute that provides that an individual who “personally believes” that he or she
is being attacked is entitled to self-defense. The first is an objective test measured by a “reasonable person,” and
the second is a “subjective test” measured by the victim’s personal perception. Can you explain the difference?
You should incorporate legal terminology into your brief. The law, like tennis or music, possesses a distinctive
vocabulary that is used to express and communicate ideas.
Ap p e n d i x R e a d i n g a n d B r i ef i ng Cas es 19

•• Consult the glossary or a law dictionary for the definition of unfamiliar legal terms, and write down questions that you
may have concerning the case.
•• The brief should be precise and limited to essential points. You should bring the brief to class and compare your analysis to
the instructor’s. Modify the brief to reflect the class discussion, and provide space for insights developed in class.
•• Consider that each case is commonly thought of as “standing for a legal proposition.” Some instructors suggest that you
write the legal rule contained in the case as a “banner” across the first page of the brief.
•• Consider why the case is included in the textbook and how the case fits into the general topic covered in the chapter.
Remain an active and critical learner, and think about the material you are reading. You should also consider how
the case relates to what you learned earlier in the course. Bring a critical perspective to reading the case, and
resist mechanically accepting the court’s judgment. Keep in mind that there are at least two parties involved
in a case, each of whom may have a persuasive argument. Most important, remember that briefing is a learn-
ing tool; it should not be so time consuming that you fail to spend time understanding and reflecting on the
material.
•• Consider how the case may relate to other areas you have studied. A case on murder may also raise interesting issues
concerning criminal intent, causality, and conspiracy. Thinking broadly about a case will help you integrate and
understand criminal law.
•• Outline the material. Some instructors may suggest that you develop an outline of the material covered in class.
This can be used to assist you in preparing for examinations.

Locating Cases
The names of the cases are followed by a set of numbers and alphabetical abbreviations. These abbreviations refer to
various legal reporters in which the cases are published. This is useful in the event that you want to read an unedited
version in the library. An increasing number of cases are also available online. The rules of citation are fairly technical
and are of immediate concern only to practicing attorneys. The following discussion presents the standard approach to
citation used by lawyers. Those of you interested in additional detail should consult The Bluebook: A Uniform System of
Citation, 18th edition (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Law Review Association, 2005).
The first number you encounter is the volume in which the case appears. This is followed by the abbreviation of the
reporter and by the page number and year of the decision. State cases are available in “regional reporters” that contain
appellate decisions of courts in various geographic areas of the United States. These volumes are cited in accordance
with standard abbreviations: Atlantic (A.), Northeast (N.E.), Pacific (P.), Southeast (S.E.), South (S.), and Southwest
(S.W.). The large number of cases decided has necessitated the organization of these reporters into various “series” (e.g.,
P.2d and P.3d).
Individual states also have their own reporter systems containing the decisions of intermediate appellate courts
and state supreme courts. Decisions of the Nebraska Supreme Court appear in the Northwest Reporter (N.W. or N.W.2d)
as well as in the Nebraska Reports (Neb.). The decisions of the Nebraska Court of Appeals are reprinted in Nebraska
Court of Appeals (Neb. Ct. App.). These decisions are usually cited to the Northwest Reporter, for example, Nebraska v.
Metzger, 319 N.W.2d 459 (Neb. 1982). New York and California cases appear in state and regional reporters as well as in
their own national reporter.
The federal court reporters reprint the published opinions of federal trials as well as appellate courts. District court
(trial) opinions appear in the Federal Supplement Reporter (F.Supp) and appellate court opinions are reprinted in the
Federal Reporter (F.), both of which are printed in several series (F.Supp.2d; F.2d and F.3d). These citations also provide
the name of the federal court that decided the case. The Second Court of Appeals in New York, for instance, is cited
as United States v. MacDonald, 531 F.2d 196 (2nd Cir. 1976). The standard citation for U.S. Supreme Court decisions is
the United States Report (U.S.), for example, Papachristou v. Jacksonville, 405 U.S. 156 (1971). This is the official version
issued by the Supreme Court; the decisions are also available in two privately published reporters, the Supreme Court
Reporter (S. Ct.) and Lawyers edition (L. Ed.).
There is a growing trend for cases to appear online in commercial electronic databases. States are also beginning to
adopt “public domain citation formats” for newly decided cases that appear on state court Web pages. These are cited
in accordance with the rules established by the state judiciary. The standard format includes the case name, the year
of decision, the state’s two-digit postal abbreviation, the abbreviation of the court in the event that this is not a state
supreme court decision, the number assigned to the case, and the paragraph number. A parallel citation to the relevant
regional reporter is also provided. The Bluebook provides examples of this format. The following example is for a state
supreme court case: Gregory v. Class, 1998 SD 106, ¶ 3, 54 N.W.2d 873, 875.
20 C hapte r 1 Th e N a t u r e , P u r p o s e , a n d Fu n c t i o n o f C r i m i n a l L a w

Legal Terminology
appellant habeas corpus plurality opinion

appellate courts head notes precedent

appellee holding reasoning

bench trial legal reporters relevant

binding authority majority opinion respondent

brief multiple judge panel Socratic method

collateral attack obiter dicta stare decisis

concurring opinion oral argument trial de novo

defendant per curiam trial transcript

dissenting opinion persuasive authority writ of certiorari

distinguishing precedents petitioner

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