Drug-Induced Homicide Defense Toolkit, by Health in Justice Action Lab

Page 30

Drug Induced Homicide Defense Toolkit

In addition, one court expressed concern in dicta about the prospect of permitting liability under this provision where the victim died by suicide: That could lead to some strange results. Suppose that, unbeknownst to the seller of an illegal drug, his buyer was intending to commit suicide by taking an overdose of drugs, bought from that seller, that were not abnormally strong, and in addition the seller had informed the buyer of the strength of the drugs, so that there was no reasonable likelihood of an accidental overdose.84 Accordingly, as with proximate cause above, defendants should consider requesting an intervening cause instruction if only to preserve the issue. B. Challenging the scientific evidence85 This section provides examples of possible ways defendants can challenge the scientific claims upon which drug-induced homicide prosecutions are based. Recall that if a jurisdiction uses a but-for test, Burrage requires prosecutors charging DIH cases to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the distributed drug was the “but-for” cause of death.86 The experts at trial were unable to prove this when the decedent was on a

84

United States v. Hatfield, 591 F.3d 945, 950 (7th Cir. 2010).

85

This section is adopted and excerpted from an article drafted by Valena E. Beety. See generally Valena E. Beety, The Overdose/Homicide Epidemic, 34 Ga. St. U. L. Rev. 983 (2018). For an example of how to employ some of the strategies discussed in this Section, see this transcript of the direct and cross examination of a medical examiner in federal court. 86

Burrage v. United States, 571 U.S. 204, 210, 216 (2014).

Disclaimer: All content is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice

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D. Secondary sources

26min
pages 120-144

c. Illinois

1min
page 119

b. Wisconsin

1min
page 118

a. Pennsylvania

3min
pages 116-117

VIII. FINALTHOUGHTS: HUMANIZING THE DEFENDANTAND USING PERSON-AFFIRMING LANGUAGE

4min
pages 110-113

F. The questionable strict liability approach

4min
pages 104-106

G. Better approaches to the overdose crisis

3min
pages 107-109

E. DIH prosecutions do not reduce drug use or drug crime

7min
pages 99-103

treatment

1min
page 98

C. Jail and prison actually increases the risk of overdose and death D. DIH prosecutions hinder law enforcement efforts to connect users with

6min
pages 94-97

B. DIH enforcement actually reduces help-seeking, thereby increasing the risk that people will die from overdose

10min
pages 87-93

A. DIH statutes purport to target major traffickers, but prosecutions target co-users and small-scale sellers

5min
pages 83-86

3. Apps

2min
pages 80-81

1. Contents and metadata

2min
pages 75-76

E. Cell phone searches and Carpenter

1min
page 74

2. Location tracking

4min
pages 77-79

B. Denial of MOUD to inmates may violate the ADA or Rehabilitation Act

2min
pages 71-72

V. SENTENCING AND MITIGATION

2min
pages 67-68

acquisition requirement

1min
page 60

D. Arguing for a broad application of the joint-user rule based on distinguishing users from sellers

3min
pages 65-66

B. Application to drug-induced homicide prosecutions

4min
pages 53-55

b. Query determination of manner of death as accident or homicide for evidence of bias

8min
pages 45-50

a. The constructive possession doctrine

3min
pages 61-63

1. Decisions requiring physical presence

1min
page 57

C. Analyzing the simultaneous acquisition requirement

1min
page 56

2. Decisions not requiring physical presence

3min
pages 58-59

ii. Toxicology as a tool

3min
pages 42-44

2. Proximate causation and foreseeability

3min
pages 26-27

3. Intervening cause limitation

2min
pages 28-29

3. Consider the state official’s expertise

6min
pages 34-37

pathologist/medical examiner

1min
page 31

B. Challenging the scientific evidence

1min
page 30

“but-for” testimony

2min
pages 32-33

1. But-for causation

10min
pages 18-25

i. Autopsy as a tool

2min
pages 40-41
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