PRINCIPLES OF PUNISHMENT
MODERN ROLE OF CRIMINAL STATUTES 1) Principle of Legality: “No crime without law; no punishment without law” a) Criminal laws should be clear/understandable to a reasonable person. b) Laws should not be made to delegate policy matters to judges, police, juries on a case-by-case basis. c) Lenity Doctrine: Judicial interpretation of ambiguous statutes should be biased in favor of the accused. (Places the burden on legislature to draft statutes with clear language) 2) Constitutional Limits d) “Void for Vagueness” – Statute is unconstitutionally vague if: i) It fails to give fair notice as to what conduct it prohibits. ii) It allows for arbitrary discretion or enforcement. iii) It is overbroad and includes innocent conduct. e) Presumption of Constitutionality: Where two reasonable interpretations of a statute are possible, one constitutional and one unconstitutional, courts will generally choose the constitutional interpretation. iv) Plain Meaning: When