Chpt 8: Inchoate Crimes- Attempt, Conspiracy, and Solicitation
extraneous factor
a condition beyond the attempter's control.
probable desistance test
a dangerous person test that focuses on how far defendants have gone, not on what's left for them to do to complete the crime.
conspiracy
agreeing to commit a crime
criminal conspiracy
agreement between two or more persons to commit a crime.
indispensable element test
asks whether defendant have gotten control of everything they need to complete the crime.
conspiracy actus reus
consists of two parts: (1)an agreement to commit a crime (in all states) and (2) an overt act in furtherance of the agreement (in about half the states)
offenses of general application
describes the inchoate crimes, which are partly general and partly specific.
unequivocality test (res ipsa loquiter test [the act speaks for itself])
examines the likelihood the defendant won't complete the crime.
substantial steps test (MPC test)
in the Model Penal Code, substantial acts toward completion of a crime and that strongly corroborate the actor's intent to commit the crime
Criminal attempt
intending to commit a crime and taking steps to complete it but something interrupts the completion of the crime's commission
solicitation mens rea
intent to get another person to commit a crime.
dangerous act rationale
looking at how closely a defendant came to completing a crime.
dangerous person rationale
looking at how fully a defendant developed a criminal purpose to commit a crime.
dangerous proximity to success test(physical proximity test)
looking at the seriousness of the offense intended; the closeness to completion of the crime; and the probability the conduct would actually have resulted in completion of the crime.
unilateral approach (in conspiracy)
not all the conspirators need to agree to commit a crime to impose criminal liability.
inchoate offenses
offenses based on crimes not yet completed.
wheel conspiracies
one or more defendants participate in every transaction.
chain conspiracies
participants at one end of the chain may know nothing of those at the other end, but every participant handles the same commodity at different points, such as manufacture, distribution, and sale.
overt act (in conspiracy)
requirement of conspiracy actus reus of some act toward completing the crime in addition to the agreement.
attempt mens rea
specific intent to commit a crime that's never completed.
conspiracy mens rea
specific intent to commit a crime, or specific intent to commit a legal act by illegal means.
attempt actus reus
steps taken to complete a crime that's never completed.
proximity tests
tests of dangerous conduct: physical proximity, dangerous proximity, and indispensable element.
defense of voluntary abandonment
the actor voluntarily and completely gives up his criminal purpose before completing the offense
criminal objective
the criminal goal of an agreement to commit a crime.
factual impossibility
the defense that some extraneous factor made it impossible to complete a crime.
legal impossibility
the defense that what the actor attempted was not a "crime"
solicitation
trying to get someone to commit a crime.
criminal solicitation
urging another person to commit a crime, even though the person doesn't respond to the urging.
solicitation actus reus
urging another person to commit a crime.
last proximate act rule
your acts brought you as close as possible to completing the crime.