Main Content
Content from the following sources has been used in the creation of this casebook:
-
Criminal Law
(First published Jun 2020)Authors:
Including material from the following sections:
- 1: Introduction
- 2.1: The Actus Reus Requirement
- 2.2.1: The Basic Task
- 2.2.2: The Mens Rea Terms
- 2.2.3.1: United States v. Balint
- 2.2.3.2: Morissette v. United States
- 2.2.3.3: Staples v. United States
- 2.2.3.4: Example Based on US v. X-Citement Video
- 2.2.4: Mistake
- 2.2.5: Official Reliance
- 3: Sex Crimes
- 4.1.1: Pennsylvania Statute
- 4.1.2: Colorado Penal Code
- 4.1.3: California Penal Code
- 4.1.4: MPC Section 210
- 4.2.1.1: Maestas v. People
- 4.2.1.2: Commonwealth v. Carroll
- 4.2.1.3: State v. Guthrie
- 4.2.1.4: Note: People v. Anderson
- 4.2.1.5: Official Comment to Section 210.6
- 4.2.2.1: Girourard v. State
- 4.2.2.2: Maher v. People
- 4.2.2.3: Comment to Section 210.3
- 4.2.2.4: People v. Casassa
- 4.3.1.1: Commonwealth v. Welansky
- 4.3.1.2: State v. Williams
- 4.3.2.1: Commonwealth v. Malone
- 4.3.2.2: United States v. Fleming
- 4.3.2.3: Note based on People v. Watson
- 4.3.2.4: Excerpt of People v. Jefferson
- 4.3.3.1: Overview
- 4.3.3.2: Inherently Dangerous Felony Requirement
- 4.3.3.3: The Merger Doctrine
- 4.3.3.4: Additional Limits
- 4.5.1: The Death Penalty in 2021: Year End Report | Death Penalty Information Center
- 5: The Significance of Resulting Harm
- 6.1.1: Hicks v. United States
- 6.1.2: MPC Section 2.06
- 6.1.3: Actus Reus
- 6.1.4: Mens Rea
- 6.1.5: The Natural and Probable Consequences Doctrine
- 6.2.1: MPC Section 5.03
- 6.2.2: Colorado Conspiracy Statute
- 6.2.3: Actus Reus and Mens Rea
- 6.2.4: Co-Conspirator Liability
- 6.2.5: One Conspiracy or Many?
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Ball/Oberman Crim Law Casebook
(First published Jun 2020)Authors:
- Michelle Oberman
- Christina Iriart
- Jenai Howard
- Phillip Yin
- Zachary Nemirovsky
- Michael Pons
- Angela Madrigal
- Miriam Contreras
- Nicholas Newman
- Leah Mesfin
- Michael Flynn
- Cydney Chilimidos
- W. David Ball
Including material from the following sections:
-
Criminal Law Spring 2017
(First published Jan 2017)Authors:
Including material from the following sections:
This book, and all H2O books, are Creative Commons licensed for sharing and re-use with the exception of certain excerpts. Any excerpts from the Restatements of the Law, Principles of the Law, and the Model Penal Code are copyright by The American Law Institute. Excerpts are reproduced with permission, not as part of a Creative Commons license.