Winstonm, on May 28 2009, 07:25 PM, said:
I venture that the jury didn't come to that conclusion, but was instructed by the judge to determine only if the law had been violated, i.e., money had gone to Hamas.
This reflects a common misconception (one that as a criminal defense attorney, Ken could address better than I, but I can outline the broad strokes). The (apparent) misconception is that the "act" (providing the money) = the "crime." Virtually always (exception coming at the end of the article), the state of mind of the defendant is not just a potentially mitigating circumstance, it's an element of the crime as well. That is to say, absent a particular state of mind, no crime may have taken place. In general, there are a few main states of mind the law recognizes (from most culpable to least culpable):
*Intentionally* (I burned the house and killed you specifically because you were in it, and I wanted to kill you)
*knowingly* (I burned down the house because I wanted to collect the insurance. I knew you were in it, and I wish you hadn't been, but I'm busy the rest of the week, so I had to burn it down tonight.
*recklessly* (I burned down the house knowing someone might very well have been in it, but I didn't actually know. Regardless, I didn't care)
*negligently* (I burned down the house, and it never occurred to me that someone might have been in it, but it would have occurred to a reasonable person).
If you don't have the required mental state, you haven't committed the crime. A couple of specific examples - Burglary is (essentially) breaking into to a place with the intent of committing a felony. Let's say you and I are standing in front of adjacent buildings, and we each break a window and enter. My plan is to steal a few computers. Your plan is to get some shelter and sleep (it's raining). As soon as we enter, we each decide it's a bad idea, so we leave. Even though we've DONE the exact same thing, I've committed burglary; you haven't.
Attempted murder requires a more culpable mental state than murder. You can recklessly be guilty of murder (Let's say you enter a bank to rob it, and you spin around in a 360, firing a few shots for crowd control purposes. One of them hits someone, and that person dies. You didn't try to kill someone, and you didn't know that someone would die, but you knew someone COULD die, and you didn't care. That's recklessness, and it's enough for murder. But if a bullet hits someone at random, and that person DOESN'T die, it's not attempted murder. You weren't trying to kill him. Attempted murder requires a heightened mental state of culpability.
That's why if you're at a restaurant, and you take someone else's identical-in- appearance coat, you haven't committed any sort of theft. "Taking coat" doesn't = "Theft." "Taking coat" PLUS "Intending to permanently deprive owner of coat" = Theft.
Getting back to the case at issue, without looking up the material support statute, it's almost certain that it has a mental state requirement...most likely that the defendant knew but didn't care that the money might fund terrorism.
The exception I alluded to above is for "strict liability" crimes - there ARE some crimes where the mental state doesn't matter. And example would be statutory rape. It doesn't matter whether you checked 3 forms of I.D. and believed to an extent that wasn't even negligent that she was 18. If she wasn't, it's on you. No mental state required.
Strict liability crimes, though, are few and far between. Aside from that, there's a pretty good clue that this isn't one of them - if the mental state of the defendant wasn't relevant, the argument wouldn't have been permitted to be made in front of the jury. It would be highly prejudicial to the prosecution, and completely irrelevant.
So it's an extremely safe bet that "money going to Hamas" doesn't = "law has been violated."
Law has been violated = "Money going to a terrorist organization" (there's a list) PLUS "Defendant wanted (or knew but didn't care that) money to go to a terrorist organization"
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