The desert traveler’s water bottle
maliciously tampered with by one malefactor and then stolen by
another has bedeviled the jurisprudence of criminal causation since
1929.
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Monday, August 29, 2016
Interacting Poisons and Criminal Causation
A recent case note: “United
States v. Smith, District Court Denies Oxycodone
Distributor's Post-trial Motions in Penalty-Enhancement Case.” 129
Harv. L. Rev. 2297 (June 10, 2016) makes the point that understanding
such statutory language as “result” and “causes” in terms of
“but for” causation runs into a problem with concurrent sufficient
cause cases, what philosophers call “overdetermination.” I want
to take a look at some hypothetical poisoning cases, with
independently sufficient causes, to pursue some issues of
interaction, timing, and the general way to approach hard questions
of criminal causation.
With intent to kill, and knowledge of
efficaciousness, Badone surreptitiously mixes substance A into
Vic’s green tea. Without knowledge of this, Badtoo, with similar
intent and knowledge, puts substance B into the cream that Vic used
with his tea.
Monday, August 1, 2016
Lottery Democracy
Adding a little randomness to democracy
is sometimes to the good. Why, when, and how far?
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