…the theory that the money had to be one or the other, and either way, the candidate committed a crime? Or, as applied to an employee who is alleged to…
…discussed here). If a youthful defendant is convicted of first-degree murder under any theory other than felony murder, then the court must hold a hearing to determine whether the defendant…
…law does not support a theory of vicarious strict liability.” State v. Bowman, 188 N.C. App. 635, 649 (2008) (“[a]lthough statutory rape is a strict liability crime, aiding and abetting…
…the victim that were not known by the defendant, does not affect this theory of admissibility. Another recent decision, in which the Court of Appeals relied on this type of…
…death, added a second-degree murder charge against Chauvin that is based on a felony murder theory, with an underlying felony of third-degree assault. Three other former Minneapolis officers who were…
…that a defendant’s previous New Jersey conviction is for a felony? In theory, it seems that it would be enough to establish: That the defendant was convicted of crime X…
…rule (or, as one person at DOC Combined Records described it to me, a “one sentence theory”), the order in which the judgments are stacked doesn’t matter. The inmate will…
…the trial here. Greitens is accused of taking a compromising photograph of a woman without her consent in the context of an extramarital affair, and then threatening to publish the…
…intended to cause a mistrial). North Carolina courts have indicated that the failure to object to a mistrial in a noncapital case is implicit consent and waives any double jeopardy…