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Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law
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Page 1: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Chapter 5Our Criminal Laws

Lesson 5-1

Criminal Law

Page 2: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

What is a Crime?

•A punishable offense against society

•Society (through police & prosecutors) attempts to identify, arrest, prosecute, and punish the criminal

•Efforts are designed to protect society rather than the victim of the crime

Page 3: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Three Elements of a Crime

(1) Duty

State statutes prohibiting certain conduct

(2) Violation of the Duty

Breach of the duty

(3) Criminal Intent

Defendant intended to commit the act

Defendant intended to do evil

Page 4: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Embezzlement

•Taking another’s property or money by a person to whom it has been entrusted

Page 5: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Corporations and Criminal Intent

•Can corporations (organizations) form criminal intent?

Yes—if their employees have criminal intent, their employer may be judged to have criminal intent

•When corporate employees commit a crime, can officers be held criminally responsible?

Yes—vicarious criminal liability

Page 6: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Criminal Intent and Age

Early common law

Under 7 below the age of reason

Over 14 know the difference between right and wrong

Between those ages knowledge had to be proven

Page 7: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Criminal Intent and Age

Today

Age of criminal liability is 18 in most states

Minors as young as 7 may be tried and punished as adults if they are accused of serious crimes such as murder

Page 8: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Criminal Intent

•Sufficient mental capacity needed

Insane persons (no)

Voluntary intoxication (yes)

Drug use (yes)

Page 9: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Is Criminal Intent Always Required for a Crime?

•Not for less serious crimes when jail is unlikely

•Traffic offenses

•Extreme carelessness

•Conduct is so careless some courts treat it the same as criminal intent

Page 10: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Criminal Conduct

Crimes against a person

Assault and battery, kidnapping, rape, murder

Crimes against property

• Theft, robbery, embezzlement

Crimes against the government and administration of justice

• Treason, tax evasion, perjury

Page 11: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Criminal ConductCrimes against public peace and order

• Rioting, disorderly conduct, illegal speeding

Crimes against realty

• Burglary, arson, criminal trespass

Crimes against consumers

• Fraudulent sale of securities, violation of pure food and drug laws

Crimes against decency

• Bigamy, obscenity, prostitution

Page 12: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Classification of Crimes

Felony

• Punishable by confinement for more than a year in state prison and/or

• Punishable by a fine of more than $1,000 or

• Death

•Murder, rape, kidnapping, arson, robbery, burglary, embezzlement, forgery, theft of large sums, perjury

Page 13: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Classification of Crimes

Misdemeanor

• Punishable by confinement in a county or city jail for less than one year and/or by fine

• Disorderly conduct, speeding

• Infractions

• Lesser misdemeanors

Page 14: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Business-Related Crimes•Businesses are subject to general criminal law

•Referred to as white-collar crimes

•Do not involve force or violence, do not cause injury to people, and do not cause physical damage to property

•Ex: evading income taxes, defrauding consumers, conspiring to fix prices, false fire and auto insurance claims, bribery

Page 15: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Larceny

•Commonly known as theft

•The wrongful taking of money or personal property belonging to someone else, with the intent to deprive the owner of possession

•Robbery—taking of property from another’s person or immediate presence, against the victim’s will, by force or by causing fear

•Burglary—entering a building without permission when intending to commit a crime

Page 16: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Larceny (con’t)

•Shoplifting, pickpocketing, purse snatching

•Can be a felony or a misdemeanor

•Determined by the value of the property stolen and other circumstances

•Robbery and burglary are always felonies

Page 17: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Receiving Stolen Property

Knowingly receiving stolen property

• intent to deprive the rightful owner of the property

Fence

• one who receives stolen property

Page 18: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

False Pretenses

•Obtaining money/property by lying about a past or existing fact

•Victim parts with property voluntarily

•Type of fraud

Page 19: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Forgery

•Falsely making/altering a writing to defraud another

•Checks

•Usually a felony

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Bribery

•Unlawfully offering or giving anything of value to influence performance of an official

•Soliciting or accepting the bribe is also criminal

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Computer Crime

Larceny? “the taking of personal property”

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Extortion

•Known as blackmail

•Obtaining money/property from a person by wrongful use of force, fear, or power of office

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Conspiracy

• An agreement between two or more persons to commit a crime

• Usually secret

• Conspiracy is a separate crime from the crime the parties plan to commit

• Either a felony or a misdemeanor

• Businesses: fix prices or divide markets

Page 24: Chapter 5 Our Criminal Laws Lesson 5-1 Criminal Law.

Arson

Willful and illegal burning of a building