Crim Law Crimes (Non-homicide)

12345678910111213141516171819202122232425
Across
  1. 6. Reasonable nondeadly force used to prevent a felony.
  2. 11. Government improperly induces a non-predisposed defendant to commit a crime.
  3. 12. Reasonable reliance on official law or unpublished law may excuse liability.
  4. 14. Common law defense when intended conduct would not actually be a crime.
  5. 17. Mistake about a material fact may negate the required mens rea.
  6. 19. Crime was the product of the defendant's mental disease or defect.
  7. 21. Minority rule requiring safe retreat before using deadly force.
  8. 22. Mental disease or defect may excuse criminal liability under tests like M'Naghten, irresistible impulse, MPC, or Durham.
  9. 23. Knowing and voluntary permission may negate unlawful contact or taking.
  10. 24. Defendant did not know the nature and quality of the act or did not know it was wrong.
  11. 25. Reasonable force used against an imminent threat of unlawful bodily contact.
Down
  1. 1. Defendant was drugged or intoxicated against their will, defeating mens rea.
  2. 2. Mental disability prevents formation of the mens rea required for the offense.
  3. 3. Reasonable force used to protect another from imminent unlawful bodily contact.
  4. 4. Reasonable nondeadly force used to prevent imminent unlawful intrusion or interference.
  5. 5. MPC defense to solicitation when voluntary, complete, and successful in thwarting the crime.
  6. 7. Defendant was unable to control conduct or conform conduct to the law.
  7. 8. Self-induced intoxication may apply to specific-intent crimes but not general-intent crimes.
  8. 9. Substance-induced impairment that may defeat mens rea in limited circumstances.
  9. 10. Very young defendant lacks capacity to form criminal mens rea.
  10. 13. No duty to retreat when defending in one's home or workplace.
  11. 15. MPC defense when attempt is voluntarily and completely renounced before the last act.
  12. 16. Defendant commits lesser harm to avoid a greater significant harm.
  13. 18. Defendant commits crime because of threat of death or serious bodily harm.
  14. 20. Conspiracy defense when the target crime necessarily requires two parties and no extra party agrees.