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Two guys just graduated from college. To celebrate they decide to spend the night hitting the bars and slamming drinks. Of course, in the bars their wandering eyes fall upon a female graduate also out celebrating. The three talk and the guys agree to take her home after the night is over. The three continued to drink and dance. Finally, the female graduate while dancing collapses in the arms of one of the guys on the dance floor.
As the guys load her into their car, they get an incredibly stupid idea: lets sexually assault her. She is unconscious; she won’t know the difference. Each of the guys proceeds to have sexual intercourse with the woman. They were unable to find the location of her home and could not ask her since she was not conscious. They pull into a 24 hour Quicky Mart to ask for help. The clerk freaks out and calls police since the clerk finds she is dead. An autopsy conducted later ascertained she died of a heart attack which happened at the time of her collapse in the bar. The two guys were not aware of her death.
The guys claim they are not guilty of sexual assault because she was dead. Are they guilty or not guilty of sexual assault?
The Court held that when a defendant is attempting to commit a criminal act, it is not a defense that facts unknown to the defendant made the actual completion of the crime impossible. The defendants believed that the young woman was alive and had not consented to have sex. Because the men believed they were raping a drunken, unconscious woman, they were guilty of attempted rape even though the woman was actually dead at the time sexual intercourse took place. See, United States v. Thomas, 13 U.S.C.M.A. 278 (1962), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b8W3ASJoWyw. See also, Preddy v. Commonwealth, 184 Va. 765, 775, 36 S. E. 2d 549 (1946) (67 year old impotent man who fails to rape a child because of a impotency is said to be guilty of attempted rape. When it is shown by the evidence that the accused did any overt act showing intent, then the crime is consummated.)
Wisconsin also holds it is no defense to an attempt crime that a fortuitous factual impossibility has arisen that prevents the actor from committing the intended crime. State v. Kordas, 191 Wis. 2d 124, 127-29, 528 N.W.2d 483 (Ct. App. 1995); State v. Damms, 9 Wis.2d 183, 190-191, 100 N.W.2d 592, 596 (1960) (impossibility for defendant to commit murder because gun was not loaded did not preclude conviction for attempted murder where defendant intended to kill and believed gun was loaded). This is the position in most states. JOSHUA DRESSLER, UNDERSTANDING CRIMINAL LAW § 27.07 (4th ed. 2006). See, United States v. Heng Awkak Roman, 356 F. Supp. 434, 438 (S.D.N.Y. 1973), aff’d, 484 F.2d 1271 (2d Cir. 1973) (stating that “however . . . impossibility may be categorized, [if] the defendants’ objective . . . was criminal, impossibility is no defense”).
In other words, “If the end sought is legally proscribed, the failure to attain it, because of the lack of a factual condition necessary to its attainment, is no defense.” J. T. Mann, Criminal Law -- Attempted Perjury -- the Rules of "Legal" and "Factual" Impossibility as Applied to the Law of Criminal Attempts, 33N.C. L. Rev. 641, 650 (1955).
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