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Criminal Law
Quinnipiac University School of Law
Meyer, Linda Ross

Criminal Law
 
 
The Determination of Criminal Guilt
 
I.            Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
A.      In Re Winship
1.        Court held that the due process clause protects the accused against conviction except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime charged.
2.        Reasons for the holding?
a.        reduces the risk of convictions resting on factual error
b.       commands the respect and confidence of the community in applications of criminal law
c.        individuals do not fear improper prosecution
d.       value determination that it is far worse to convict an innocent man than to let a guilty man go free – distinguishes criminal standard from civil standard
 
B.       Mullaney v. Wilbur (S.C. 1975) – D was charged with murder. Trial court instructed jury that if state proved that D killed the victim unlawfully and intentionally, then it was murder. If D persuaded jury that the killing was in the heat of passion on sudden provocation, then it was manslaughter. Supreme Court held that instructions violated Winship.
1.        Court held that the due process clause required state not only to prove that D was guilty of criminal homicide, but also to persuade the jury regarding the facts relating to D’s degree of criminal culpability.
2.        Once a defendant satisfies his burden of production regarding an affirmative defense, the prosecution is constitutionally required to disprove the defense.
 
C.       Patterson v. New York (S.C. 1977) – D was charged with murder. He believed he was guilty of manslaughter because of extreme emotional disturbance. N.Y. homicide statute required proof of 3 facts: (1) human death; (2) that the accused caused it; and (3) that the accused intended the result. The statute explicitly made extreme emotional disturbance an affirmative defense. D argued that Mullaney invalidated the statute because the law permitted the prosecutor to shift to him the burden of proving his lesser level of culpability due to extreme emotional disturbance. Supreme Court upheld the statute.
1.        Court rejected reading of Mullaney that construed the due process clause to require the prosecution to prove any fact affecting the defendant’s degree of criminal culpability on the grounds that it was unduly restrictive of legislative authority to allocate burdens of proof.
2.        Court reasoned that if it endorsed that broad reading, legislatures would be inclined to repeal defenses, or at least not broaden them.
3.        Under the due process clause, the prosecution is required to prove every element in the definition of an offense, but the legislature may, if it chooses to do so, allocate to the defendant the burden of persuasion regarding non-elements, i.e., defenses.
 
D.      Analysis of Winship, Mullaney & Patterson
1.        In view of underlying values of the due process clause enunciated in Winship, strong case that, since prosecution is required to prove the elements of an offense, even if the crime is a trivial one that will not result in substantial incarceration or stigma, it should also be required to prove the degree of a person’s guilty.
2.        Mullaney and Patterson worried about restricting legislative prerogatives.
3.        Practical effect of Patterson is to permit legislatures, at least under the aegis of the due process clause, to avoid most of the restriction of Winship by redrafting their statutes to treat the absence of what previously had been an element of an offense as an affirmative defense.
 
E.       What is Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt?
1.        “It is that state of the case, which, after the entire comparison and consideration of all the evidence, leaves the minds of jurors in that condition that they cannot say

s fear of punishment in would-be violators of the law
5.        Specific deterrence – a person is punished to deter future misconduct by that person.
a.        deterrence by incapacitation – imprisonment prevents him from committing crimes
b.       deterrence by intimidation – punishment reminds him that if he returns to a life of crime, he will experience more pain
 
B.       Retribution – punishment is justified when it is deserved.
1.        Looks backward and justifies punishment solely on the basis of the voluntary commission of a crime.
2.        Based on the view that humans possess free will, and therefore, may justly be blamed when they choose to violate society’s mores.
3.        Assaultive retribution – it is morally right to hate criminals. Because the criminal has harmed society, it is morally right to hurt him back.
4.        Protective retribution – punishment is a means of securing a moral balance in the society.
a.        society is made of rule, and as long as everyone follows the rules, an equilibrium exists – everyone is similarly benefited and burdened
b.       if a person fails to exercise self-restraint, he destroys the balance and becomes a free-rider – he benefits from the system of rule without accepting the same burdens
c.        by punishing the wrongdoer, society demonstrates its respect for him – society treats him as a responsible moral agent
d.       punishment permits the offender to pay his debt to society and to return to it free of moral guilt and stigma