ADMJ 103 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Irresistible Impulse

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21 Jun 2020
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Under traditional law, to establish causation, the state must establish cause in fact (actual cause) and proximate cause (legal cause). If the exact same result would not have occurred in the exact same way but for the action of the defendant, then there is cause in fact. An act is the proximate cause of all of the natural and probable consequences of the act. Clues used to determine the presence of proximate cause include the defendant"s intent, the foreseeability of the event, how substantial a bearing the defendant"s action had on the result, and the distance in time, space, and chain of events. The mpc still requires cause in fact and proximate cause, though it eliminates the term proximate cause and sets the criteria of proximate cause as asking the jury to do justice. Some jurisdictions have added the irresistible impulse defense.

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