1 / 17

Chapter Outline

Chapter Outline. 1. Civil Law and Criminal Law 2. Classification of Crimes 3. The essentials of Criminal Liability 4. Corporate Criminal Liability 5. Types of Crimes 6. Defenses to Criminal Liability 7. Criminal Procedures 8. Cyber Crime. §1: Civil and Criminal Law.

kenton
Download Presentation

Chapter Outline

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter Outline 1. Civil Law and Criminal Law 2. Classification of Crimes 3. The essentials of Criminal Liability 4. Corporate Criminal Liability 5. Types of Crimes 6. Defenses to Criminal Liability 7. Criminal Procedures 8. Cyber Crime

  2. §1: Civil and Criminal Law Major differences:

  3. §2: Classification of Crimes • An act can have both civil and criminal consequences. (O.J. Simpson trials)

  4. §3: Essentials of Criminal Liability To be convicted of a crime, a person must: • Commit a guilty act (actus reus). • Have the guilty mind (mens rea) during commission of the guilty act.

  5. §4: Corporate Criminal Liability • A corporation is creature of state statute. • A corporate entity may be convicted of a crime. • Punishment would be fines and/or denial of certain legal privileges.

  6. Liability of Corporate Entity • Corporations may be convicted of criminal activity if: • Crime is within agent/employee’s scope of employment; • Corporation fails to perform a legally required duty; or • Crime authorized or requested by corporate principal/officer.

  7. Liability of Corporate Officers • Corporate officers and directors are personally liable for crimes they commit. • Also, they may be criminally liable for acts of their under the “Responsible Corporate Officer” doctrine. U.S. v. Park (1975). • Case : U.S. v. Hanousek (1999).

  8. §5: Types of Crimes • Violent Crimes (aka Crimes Against Persons). • Murder, sexual assault, rape, robbery. • Property Crimes. • Burglary, larceny, theft of trade secrets, theft of services, arson, receipt of stolen goods, forgery.

  9. “White Collar” Crimes Crimes occurring in the business context using non-violent means to obtain personal or business advantage. • Embezzlement. • Mail or Wire Fraud (federal). • Bribery. • Bankruptcy Fraud (federal). • Insider Trading (federal). • Theft of Trade Secrets (federal).

  10. §6: Defenses to Criminal Liability • Infancy (juvenile). • Involuntary Intoxication: is a defense if person was incapable of understanding act. • Insanity: defendant lacked substantial capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of act or to conform act to law. • Mistake. • Duress. • Consent.

  11. Defenses [2] • Self-Defense of People and Property: use deadly force if reasonable belief of immanent death or serious injury; cannot use deadly force to protect property alone. • Necessity: criminal act necessary to prevent greater harm.

  12. Defenses [3] • Entrapment: prevents government from encouraging crimes. Key issue: was the defendant pre-disposed to commit the act? • Statute of Limitations. • Immunity.

  13. §7: Criminal Procedures • U.S. Constitution provides specific safeguards for those accused of crimes at federal and state level. • Criminal procedures are designed to protect against the arbitrary use of power by the government. • Case :People v. McFarlan (2002).

  14. Fourth Amendment • The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable search and seizures. • No warrant for search or arrest can issue without probable cause.

  15. Exclusionary Rule • Evidence obtained in violation of Constitutional amendments is excluded from trial. • Deter police from warrantless searches, seizures and misconduct. • “Inevitability” and “good faith” are exceptions to the rule.

  16. The “Miranda” Rule • Case :Miranda v. Arizona (1966) required police to inform suspects of their constitutional rights. • The Supreme Court upheld Miranda in Dickerson v. U.S. (2000).

  17. Criminal Process

More Related