Main Content
Content from the following sources has been used in the creation of this casebook:
-
Criminal Law Fall 2022
(First published Aug 2022)Authors:
Including material from the following sections:
-
Criminal Law
(First published Jan 2024)Authors:
Including material from the following sections:
- 1.6: New York Penal Law § 1.05 General purposes
- 2.2: New York Penal Law § 15.00 Culpability; definitions of terms.
- 2.3: New York Penal Law § 15.10 Requirements for criminal liability in general and for offenses of strict liability and mental culpability.
- 2.5: People v. Shaughnessy
- 2.7: People v. Erb
- 2.10: New York Penal Law § 15.05 Culpability; definitions of culpable mental states
- 2.11: New York Penal Law § 15.15 Construction of statutes with respect to culpability requirements
- 2.12: People v. Sanford
- 2.15: New York Penal Law § 15.20 Effect of ignorance or mistake upon liability
- 2.16: People v. Soe
- 3.5: People v. Casassa
- 3.6: People v. Roche
- 3.7: People v. Tabarez
- 3.13: People v. Suarez
- 3.14: People v. Heidgen
- 3.17: People v. Santiago
- 3.18: People v. Hernandez
- 6.1: Attempt
- 6.2: New York Penal Law § 110.00 Attempt to commit a crime
- 6.3: New York Penal Law § 110.05 Attempt to commit a crime; punishment
- 6.4: New York Penal Law § 110.10 Attempt to commit a crime; no defense
- 6.5: People v. Rizzo
- 6.6: People v. Mahboubian
- 6.8: New York Penal Law § 20.00 Criminal liability for conduct of another
- 6.10: People v. Taylor
- 6.11: People v. Russell
- 7.2: New York Penal Law § 35.00 & .05 Justification; generally
- 7.3: New York Penal Law § 35.15 Justification; use of physical force in defense of a person
- 7.4: People v. Goetz
- 7.6: The Trial of Bernhard Goetz: Goetz's Videotaped Confession
- 7.9: People v. Brown
- 7.12: New York Penal Law § 40.05 Entrapment
Criminal Law incorporates additional material from:
- Criminal Law - REVISIONS FOR FUTURE USE (first published Mar 2017) with contributions from:
-
Ball/Oberman Crim Law Casebook (Third Edition)
(First published Jun 2021)Authors:
Including material from the following sections:
Ball/Oberman Crim Law Casebook (Third Edition) incorporates additional material from:
- Ball/Oberman Crim Law Casebook (first published Jun 2020) with contributions from:
-
Ball/Oberman Crim Law Casebook (Fourth Edition)
(First published Aug 2024)Authors:
Including material from the following sections:
- 1.18: City of Chicago v. Morales
- 3.1: Model Penal Code Article 210
- 3.2: PA Consol. Statutes, Title 18 Chapter 25
- 3.3: NY Penal Law: Selected Homicide Laws
- 3.8: The case of Herbert Lee Richardson: A clemency petition in a death penalty case
- 3.19: In Defense of the Felony Murder Doctrine
- 3.20: Sentenced to Life for an Accident Miles Away
- 6.17: Pinkerton v. United States
- 7.7: Florida Statute on Justifiable Use of Force
Ball/Oberman Crim Law Casebook (Fourth Edition) incorporates additional material from:
- Ball/Oberman Crim Law Casebook (first published Jun 2020) with contributions from:
- Criminal Law Spring 2017 (first published Jan 2017) with contributions from:
-
Criminal Law - Godsoe
(First published Aug 2022)Authors:
Including material from the following sections:
Criminal Law - Godsoe incorporates additional material from:
- Ball/Oberman Crim Law Casebook (first published Jun 2020) with contributions from:
- Tanaka Criminal Law Casebook (first published Apr 2021) with contributions from:
- Criminal Law Spring 2017 (first published Jan 2017) with contributions from:
- Criminal Law Fall 2021 (first published Aug 2021) with contributions from:
- Criminal Law (first published Jun 2020) with contributions from:
- Criminal Law Fall 2020 (first published Aug 2020) with contributions from:
-
Criminal Law Spring 2017
(First published Dec 2016)Authors:
Including material from the following sections:
-
Criminal Law Spring 2021
(First published Jan 2021)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.