The History of Murder Podcast

Julia

The legal history podcast that looks at the development and history of the crime of murder in the common law. historyofmurder.substack.com

  1. Infanticide

    08/07/2022

    Infanticide

    Today we begin to talk about a very special kind of homicide:  infanticide. Infanticide, or the killing of newborn children, is a surprisingly large topic in the history of murder, and we're going to cover it over the course of two episodes. This topic has a colourful history because Parliament, judges and juries aren't sure what to make of it. If a woman kills her child, is it murder? In some respects, it sounds like murder; after all, it's one person killing another. But in other respects, it doesn't really resemble the classic murder cases we've seen so far. A mother who kills her child out of desperation doesn't seem to be committing the same crime as someone who stabs his rival to death over some trivial insult. In today's episode, we'll look at the 1624 law called An act to prevent the destroying and murthering of b*****d children. We'll see Parliament attempt to crack down on "lewd women" who kill their "b*****d children" and get away with it. Then, we'll see that this law has some serious flaws (namely, that it lumps together innocent and guilty women and tells courts to execute the lot of them). Finally, we'll see how judges and juries think that that's a bit extreme, how they walk it back, and how they redefine infanticide going forward. We'll wrap up by considering the strange relationship between courts and legislators. If you like the episode, please help us out by reviewing it on your podcast app! As always, check out the website for sources and more details at historyofmurderpodcast.com. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit historyofmurder.substack.com

    40 min
  2. Felony Murder and Constructive Malice

    10/27/2021

    Felony Murder and Constructive Malice

    Today we take a whirlwind tour through the controversial topic of felony murder. In today's episode, we ask whether it is murder when someone kills someone else unintentionally but during the course of a serious crime (or a felony). Normally killing has to be intentional to qualify as murder - but does the criminal context change this rule? For instance, is it murder when a robber accidentally shoots a cashier during an armed robbery? What about when a kidnapper smothers someone by accident while kidnapping them? Some modern common-law jurisdictions are deeply divided on this topic, and we'll see why after looking at felony murder's chaotic history. We'll see early-modern common law superstars butt heads over obscure examples (is it murder when you go poaching but your arrow goes astray and kills a boy lurking in a nearby bush?). We'll also see how an early-eighteenth century attempt to clear things up just muddles it even more and ultimately gives us the term "felony murder." We'll ask what's so constructive about malice anyways. And finally, we'll see how theory and practice never quite seem to match up in this bizarre area of the law. Got any comments on felony murder? Think I didn't come down hard enough on the doctrine, or conversely, that I was too critical of it? Send me your thoughts at historyofmurderpocast.com or @murderhistorian on Twitter! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit historyofmurder.substack.com

    48 min
5
out of 5
2 Ratings

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The legal history podcast that looks at the development and history of the crime of murder in the common law. historyofmurder.substack.com