Title: Criminal Law CJ 220 Chapter 2
1Criminal Law CJ 220 Chapter 2
- Constitutional Limits on Criminal Law
- Andrew Fulkerson, JD, PhD
- Southeast Missouri State University
2Constitutional Limits on Criminal Law
- Background ideology of framers of Constitution
- Suspicious of powerful government
- Believed in rights of individuals
- Freedom depends upon order
- Order depends upon control
- Constitution balances power of government with
liberty of citizens
3Constitutional Limits
- Constitutional democracy
- Not a pure democracy-majority does not have
absolute power - Constitution limits power to create crimes and
fix punishment
4Constitutional Limits
- The Rule of Law
- Government can punish only if-
- Law must define the crime
- Law must establish the punishment for violations
5Constitutional Limits
- Challenging Constitutionality of a law is
difficult. - Courts are sensitive to the will of the people
- Burden of proof in challenging Constitutionality
of a law is on the challenger. There is a legal
presumption that a law is valid. - Justice Holmes described Constitutional arguments
as arguments of the law resort for lawyers.
6Constitutional Limits
- Ex Post Facto Laws
- Law that punishes a crime that is not defined
until after conduct occurs. - Article I, Section 9 of U.S. Constitution
provides that no state shall pass any ex post
facto laws. -
7Constitutional Limits
- Purpose of prohibition against ex post facto
laws - Give fair warning to private individuals
- Prevent arbitrary action by government officials
8Constitutional Limits
- Void for Vagueness Doctrine
- Vague laws fail to warn persons, and allow
arbitrary action by government - Similar to ex post facto laws in this failure to
provide adequate warning. - Vague laws violate due process.
9Constitutional Limits
- Reasoning for void for vagueness doctrine
- Criminal punishment involves deprivation of life,
liberty or property - Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments prohibit federal
and state governments from taking life, liberty
or property without due process of law. - Failure to adequately warn persons what law
prohibits, or allowing government to define or
enforce such a law denies persons of life,
liberty or property without due process of law.
10Constitutional Limits
- Two-pronged test for void for vagueness.
- 1. Does law provide fair warning as to what law
prohibits? - Directed at individuals
- 2. Does law prevent arbitrary and
discriminatory administration of justice? - Directed at government
11Constitutional Limits
- State v. Metzger, 319 N.W. 2d 459 (Neb. 1982)
12Standards of Review
Type of Case Standard State Interest
Police Power (most cases) Rational Basis Legitimate State Interest
1. Fundamental Rights 2. Race Strict Scrutiny Compelling
13Equal Protection of the Laws
- Last resort of constitutional arguments
14Equal Protection of the Laws
- 14th Amendment no state shall deny any
persons the equal protection of the laws. - But it does allow classifications which have a
rational basis. - Arbitrary classifications are not permitted.
-
15Equal Protection of the Laws
- Strict scrutiny test must meet a compelling
state interest - Race-based classifications are subject to strict
scrutiny and never upheld. - Gender-based classifications must have a fair
and substantial relationship to legitimate state
goals.
16Free Speech
- First Amendment Congress shall make no law
...abridging the freedom of speech. Supreme
Court has interpreted this to include expressive
conduct. - Expressive conduct means actions that communicate
ideas and feelings.
17Free Speech
- Speech is fundamental right giving it a preferred
status. - To restrict free speech, government must show
more than a rational basis to support the
restriction. - It must show a compelling interest, a much higher
burden of proof.
18Free Speech
- . Supreme Court has recognized five categories
of speech that are not protected - Obscenity
- Profanity
- Libel
- Fighting words
- Expression that creates a clear and present
danger of an evil that legislature has right to
prohibit.
19Free Speech
- Difficulty in regulating speech is
- Laws may often be overly broad
- May touch on protected forms of expression.
- May violate the void-for-overbreadth doctrine.
20Free Speech
- Chilling effect on fundamental right to
expression violates right to liberty guaranteed
by 5th and 14th Amendments.
21Free Speech
- People v. Rokicki, 307 Ill.App. 3d 645, 718
N.E.2d 333 (Ill. App. 1999
22Free Speech
- Nude Dancing
- Barnes v. Glenn Theatre, Inc., 5011 U.S. 560
(1991)
23Free Speech
- Flag Burning
- Texas v. Johnson, 491 U.S. 397 (1989)
24Free Speech and Schools
- Morse, et al v. Frederick, No. 06-278. Argued
March 19, 2007--Decided June 25, 2007 - http//caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgibin/getcase.pl?co
urtUSnavbycasevol000invol06-278
25Criminal Law CJ 220 Chapter 2
- Constitutional Limits on Criminal Law
- Andrew Fulkerson, JD, PhD
- Southeast Missouri State University
26Right to Privacy
- Not specifically included in Constitution or
Amendments. - US Supreme Court has ruled that right of privacy
is found in 6 amendments to Constitution - 1st Amendment prohibits laws that infringe on
free expression, association and belief. - 3d Amendment prohibits quartering soldiers in
private homes - 4th Amendment protects right to be secure in
ones person, house, papers and effects. - 9th Amendment provides that listing of certain
rights in Constitution shall not be construed to
deny other rights. - 5th and 14th Amendments prohibit denial of
liberty without due process of law.
27Right to Privacy
- Right to privacy prohibits government from
invading the sanctity of ones home and privacies
of life. - It is a fundamental right.
- Government must show a compelling state
interest to justify invading the right. - Right to be let alone by government.
28Right to Privacy
- Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 506
29Right to Privacy
- Stanley v. Georgia, 394 U.S. 557 (1969)
30Right to Privacy
- Bowers v. Hardwick, 478 U.S. 86 (1986)
31Right to Privacy
- Lawrence et al v. Texas, 123 S.Ct. 2472 (2003)
32Cruel and unusual punishments
- 8th Amendment
- excessive fines shall not be imposed and cruel
and unusual punishments shall not be inflicted.
33Cruel and unusual punishments
- Supreme Court has ruled that the following are
cruel and unsuual. - Barbaric punishments
- Punishments that are disproportionate to the
crime committed.
34Cruel and unusual punishments
- Court ruled that method of administering death
penalty should not do more than extinguish
life. - Beheading cruel because it mutilates the body.
- Death should be instantaneous and painless.
35Proportionality
- Magna Carta 1215,
- Prohibited excessive fines.
- Imprisonment was not even a form of punishment at
that time.
36Proportionality
- US Supreme Court first questioned the
proportionality of a sentence in Weems v. United
States, (1910) - Weems convicted of falsifying a document and
sentenced to 15 years at hard labor in chains. - Supreme Court ruled it was cruel and unusual
because the sentence was disproportionate to the
crime.
37Proportionality
- State v. Wilson, 685 So.2d 1063 (La. 1996)
38Proportionality
- Ewing v. California, 538 U.S. 11 (2003)