Difference between revisions of "Mayhem"

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(Created page with "==Background== The word "mayhem" is the older form of the word "maim."<ref>Maria Del Rio, J.D., Mayhem and Related Offenses, American Jurisprudence, 2nd edition (2010)</ref> Und...")
 
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==Model Penal Code==
 
==Model Penal Code==
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The Model Penal Code consolidates the crime of mayhem with the crime of assault in section 211.1. Mayhem is usually seen as constituting aggravated assault.<ref>Model Penal Code, Explanatory Notes for Sections 211.1-211.3 (2009)</ref>
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<references>

Revision as of 23:54, 18 January 2011

Background

The word "mayhem" is the older form of the word "maim."[1] Under common law, mayhem is the crime of maliciously injuring a person's body, especially to impair or destroy the victim's capacity for self-defense.[2] This is usually treated as part of aggravated battery under modern-day statutes. Mayhem has three elements: 1) a malicious and 2) unlawful act of physical force 3 which deprives a person of a member of his/her body or disables, disfigures, or renders it useless, or cuts or disables the tongue, or puts out an eye, or slits the nose, ear, or lip.[3] Mayhem may also refer to violent destruction or disruption.

Model Penal Code

The Model Penal Code consolidates the crime of mayhem with the crime of assault in section 211.1. Mayhem is usually seen as constituting aggravated assault.[4]

<references>

  1. Maria Del Rio, J.D., Mayhem and Related Offenses, American Jurisprudence, 2nd edition (2010)
  2. Black's Law Dictionary, 9th edition (2009)
  3. Maria Del Rio, J.D., Mayhem and Related Offenses, American Jurisprudence, 2nd edition (2010)
  4. Model Penal Code, Explanatory Notes for Sections 211.1-211.3 (2009)