
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This lecture provides a comprehensive overview of substantive criminal law, focusing on the elements of crimes, defenses available to defendants, and specific categories of crimes such as homicide and inchoate offenses. It emphasizes the importance of understanding actus reus, mens rea, and various defenses to criminal liability, which are crucial for success in bar examinations and legal practice.
Takeaways
Criminal law principles are essential for bar exam success.
Actus reus and mens rea are foundational to criminal liability.
Causation is critical in determining liability for result crimes.
Specific intent crimes allow for defenses like voluntary intoxication.
General intent crimes permit reasonable mistakes of fact as defenses.
Strict liability crimes do not require proof of mens rea.
Homicide is a heavily litigated area of criminal law.
Manslaughter is categorized into voluntary and involuntary types.
Inchoate offenses punish conduct directed toward a crime.
Defenses to criminal liability include self-defense and necessity.
criminal law, substantive crimes, defenses, actus reus, mens rea, homicide, inchoate offenses, property crimes, defenses to liability
By The Law School of America3.1
6060 ratings
This lecture provides a comprehensive overview of substantive criminal law, focusing on the elements of crimes, defenses available to defendants, and specific categories of crimes such as homicide and inchoate offenses. It emphasizes the importance of understanding actus reus, mens rea, and various defenses to criminal liability, which are crucial for success in bar examinations and legal practice.
Takeaways
Criminal law principles are essential for bar exam success.
Actus reus and mens rea are foundational to criminal liability.
Causation is critical in determining liability for result crimes.
Specific intent crimes allow for defenses like voluntary intoxication.
General intent crimes permit reasonable mistakes of fact as defenses.
Strict liability crimes do not require proof of mens rea.
Homicide is a heavily litigated area of criminal law.
Manslaughter is categorized into voluntary and involuntary types.
Inchoate offenses punish conduct directed toward a crime.
Defenses to criminal liability include self-defense and necessity.
criminal law, substantive crimes, defenses, actus reus, mens rea, homicide, inchoate offenses, property crimes, defenses to liability

43,687 Listeners

7,913 Listeners

153,989 Listeners

488 Listeners

512 Listeners

8,539 Listeners

113,121 Listeners

554 Listeners

369,956 Listeners

439 Listeners

47,718 Listeners

19 Listeners

3,946 Listeners

1,849 Listeners

3 Listeners