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Criminal Law Intents – Learn what Most Professors in Law School Do Not Understand

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Criminal Law Intents – Learn what Most Professors in Law School Do Not Understand


#Criminal #Law #Intents #Learn #Professors #Law #School #Understand

Learn criminal law intents such as specific intent, malice , and general intent the proper way and why the felony murder rule was created in order to impute intent from inherently dangerous criminal conduct.

Most professors in law school do not understand the concept behind criminal law intents. As such they then compound the error by adopting bastardized versions of concepts such as transferred intent to explain what is easily explained by simple set theory.

Yes we know if you had been good in math you would have sent to medical school….

This lecture will teach you the four elements of criminal law intents and then show you how they are grouped into three different sets and why they did this under the common law. If you understand those concepts then knowing and understanding the felony murder rule is just as simple and easy.

Never be confused again. If you listen to this lecture you will obtain superior results in less than 3-4 hours once you apply the concepts to your practice, or law school studies.

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7 thoughts on “Criminal Law Intents – Learn what Most Professors in Law School Do Not Understand”

  1. In 1957 England abolished the felony-murder rule. Section 1 of England's Homicide Act, 1957, 5 & 6 Eliz 2, c 11, § 1. They reason it is unfair to the criminal to impute the intent to murder simply from the fact that the "killer" committed an act that is known to be inherently dangerous to people and someone dies. They feel murder should be reserved to those who actually express malice for murder and not imputed malice for murder.

  2. That video talks about the common law and how criminal intents were originally constructed. It is applicable to both Commonwealth and US law. Of course, the UK no longer accepts the felony murder rule.

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