Law and Justice: Criminal Law 2025 ACTUAL EXAM COMPLETE 60
QUESTIONS WITH DETAILED VERIFIED ANSWERS (100% CORRECT
ANSWERS) /ALREADY GRADED A+
1. four elements Mens Rea
of a crime Actus Reus
Causation
Concurrence
2. mens rea the mental requirement in criminal law, aka the guilty mind
3. four categories of intent
knowledge recklessness criminal
negligence
4. intent the conscious desire to commit an illegal act
5. knowledge a person is aware that their actions will have negative results but does
not care
6. recklessness consciously taking a risk that a responsible person would not take
7. criminal a person's failure to meet a reasonable standard of care for the lives and
negli-
safety of others
gence
8. actus reus the physical part of a crime, or the guilty act; typically describes what the
defendant must do
9. omission failing to preform an act required by criminal law, if a person is physically
able to preform the act
To get this or any other Exam contact ()
, Law and Justice: Criminal Law 2025 ACTUAL EXAM COMPLETE 60
QUESTIONS WITH DETAILED VERIFIED ANSWERS (100% CORRECT
ANSWERS) /ALREADY GRADED A+
10. state of an ottense in which a person is not actively committing the act, but is still in
being/af- fairs
violation of the law
11. causation the defendant's conduct must be linked to the resulting harm
12. cause and fact the harm caused would not have occurred if the defendant had not
acted the way they did
13. proximate cause the defendant should have been able to foresee the consequences of
their actions
14. concurrence mens rea and actus reus must take place simultaneously, meaning the
criminal must have had intent while committing the guilty act
15. motive the reason why an illegal act was preformed
16. strict liability are crimes regardless of a guilty state of mind, meaning they only need
of- fenses
an actus reus, not a mens rea
17. battery any unlawful physical contact inflicted by one person upon another
without con- sent; actual injury is not necessary, the only requirement
is the intention to do bodily harm
18. assault any attempt or threat to carry out a physical attack upon another person
19. stalking a person repeatedly follows or harasses another person and makes
threats, caus- ing the victim to fear death or bodily injury
20. rape the act of unlawful sexual intercourse committed by a man with a woman by
force or without her consent
21. statutory rape sexual intercourse by a man with a woman who has not yet reached the
legal age of consent
To get this or any other Exam contact ()
QUESTIONS WITH DETAILED VERIFIED ANSWERS (100% CORRECT
ANSWERS) /ALREADY GRADED A+
1. four elements Mens Rea
of a crime Actus Reus
Causation
Concurrence
2. mens rea the mental requirement in criminal law, aka the guilty mind
3. four categories of intent
knowledge recklessness criminal
negligence
4. intent the conscious desire to commit an illegal act
5. knowledge a person is aware that their actions will have negative results but does
not care
6. recklessness consciously taking a risk that a responsible person would not take
7. criminal a person's failure to meet a reasonable standard of care for the lives and
negli-
safety of others
gence
8. actus reus the physical part of a crime, or the guilty act; typically describes what the
defendant must do
9. omission failing to preform an act required by criminal law, if a person is physically
able to preform the act
To get this or any other Exam contact ()
, Law and Justice: Criminal Law 2025 ACTUAL EXAM COMPLETE 60
QUESTIONS WITH DETAILED VERIFIED ANSWERS (100% CORRECT
ANSWERS) /ALREADY GRADED A+
10. state of an ottense in which a person is not actively committing the act, but is still in
being/af- fairs
violation of the law
11. causation the defendant's conduct must be linked to the resulting harm
12. cause and fact the harm caused would not have occurred if the defendant had not
acted the way they did
13. proximate cause the defendant should have been able to foresee the consequences of
their actions
14. concurrence mens rea and actus reus must take place simultaneously, meaning the
criminal must have had intent while committing the guilty act
15. motive the reason why an illegal act was preformed
16. strict liability are crimes regardless of a guilty state of mind, meaning they only need
of- fenses
an actus reus, not a mens rea
17. battery any unlawful physical contact inflicted by one person upon another
without con- sent; actual injury is not necessary, the only requirement
is the intention to do bodily harm
18. assault any attempt or threat to carry out a physical attack upon another person
19. stalking a person repeatedly follows or harasses another person and makes
threats, caus- ing the victim to fear death or bodily injury
20. rape the act of unlawful sexual intercourse committed by a man with a woman by
force or without her consent
21. statutory rape sexual intercourse by a man with a woman who has not yet reached the
legal age of consent
To get this or any other Exam contact ()