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Mens rea

Mens rea (from Latin, "bad mind") is the mental state that, in combination with the actus reus ("bad act"), produces criminal liability. According to Western jurisprudence, there must be a concurrence of both actus reus and mens rea for a crime to have been committed. As it is impossible to know what a defendant actually thought at the time of his criminal act, mens rea is often inferred from the circumstances. Mens rea is not the same thing as motive[?]. Crimes of strict liability, such as traffic offenses, involve the mens rea of strict liability, which does not require any criminal intent (see Common Law below).

The Model Penal Code[?], a publication of the American Law Institute, defines mens rea in particularly clear terms and has been adopted by much of the United States:

Contrast these four categories with the Common Law mens rea definitions:

A concept that is somewhat misleading for its over-simplification is so-called presumed knowledge of the law. A more appropriate saying is that generally, ignorance of the law is not an excuse. No one is "presumed" to know the law; the reality is that knowledge of the particular statute prohibiting certain conduct is not usually an element of the crime created by that statute, and therefore knowledge of the law is not required for punishment.

Examples of mens rea in statutes

Model Penal Code: A person commits murder if he (1) purposely or knowingly (2) causes the death of a human being.

Common Law: (a) It shall be unlawful for a person to cause the death of a human being with malice aforethought. (b) A violation of this section is murder in the second degree.

See also: actus reus, manslaughter, animus nocendi, voluntas necandi[?]

See generally: Criminal law

 

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