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Criminal law
Part of the common law series
Elements of all crimes
Mens rea · Actus reus
Criminal jurisdiction
Categories of crimes
Felony/Indictable
Misdemeanor/Summary
Hybrid offence · Lesser included offense
Criminal negligence
Regulatory offences
Crimes against the person
Assault · Battery · Robbery
Kidnapping · Rape
Mayhem · Manslaughter · Murder
Crimes against property
Burglary · Larceny · Arson
Embezzlement · False pretenses
Extortion · Forgery
Crimes against justice
Bribery · Perjury
Obstruction of justice
Misprision of felony
Inchoate offenses
Solicitation · Attempt
Conspiracy · Accessory
Defenses to crime
Self defense and defense of others
Necessity · Duress
Insanity/mental disorder · Automatism
Intoxication defense
Attendant circumstances
Other areas of the common law
Contract law · Tort law · Property law
Wills and trusts · Evidence
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Criminal law (also known as penal law) is the body of law that punishes criminals for committing offences against the state. The goal of this process is that of achieving criminal justice.

According to criminal law, crimes are offences against the social order. In common law jurisdictions, there is a legal fiction that crimes disturb the peace of the sovereign. Government officials, as agents of the sovereign, are responsible for the prosecution of offenders. Hence, the criminal law "plaintiff" is the sovereign, which in practical terms translates into the monarch or the people.

The main objective of criminal law is punishing the offender and discouraging others to offend, while that of civil law is individual compensation to whom the wrong was committed against. Criminal offences consist of two distinct elements; the physical act (the actus reus, guilty act) and the requisite mental state with which the act is done (the mens rea, guilty mind). For example, in murder the 'actus reus is the unlawful killing of a person, while the 'mens rea is malice aforethought (the intention to kill or cause grievous injury). The criminal law also details the defenses that defendants may bring to lessen or negate their liability (criminal responsibility) and specifies the punishment which may be inflicted. Criminal law neither requires a victim, nor a victim's consent, to prosecute an offender. Furthermore, a criminal prosecution can occur over the objections of the victim and the consent of the victim is not a defense in most crimes.

Criminal law in most jurisdictions both in the common and civil law traditions is divided into two fields:

  • Criminal procedure regulates the process for addressing violations of criminal law
  • Substantive criminal law details the definition of, and punishments for, various crimes.

Criminal law distinguishes crimes from civil wrongs such as tort or breach of contract. Criminal law has been seen as a system of regulating the behavior of individuals and groups in relation to societal norms at large whereas civil law is aimed primarily at the relationship between private individuals and their rights and obligations under the law. Although many ancient legal systems did not clearly define a distinction between criminal and civil law, in England there was little difference until the codification of criminal law occurred in the late nineteenth century. In most U.S. law schools, the basic course in criminal law is based upon the English common criminal law of 1750 (with some minor American modifications like the clarification of mens rea in the Model Penal Code).

Quotes

A society should not be judged on how it treats its outstanding citizens but by how it treats its criminals.w/w/Fyodor Dostoyevsky


References

External links

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Page Criminal law cached on Friday 05th of September 2008 05:48:28 PM