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Chapter 5 - Inchoate Offenses

Horizontales
Actions taken in preparation to commit a crime.
That which is in fact impossible to achieve. Unlike legal impossibility, this is not a defense to a charge of attempt.
The inchoate offense of requesting or encouraging someone to engage in illegal conduct.
The inchoate offense of two or more persons agreeing or planning to commit a target crime.
A rule enunciated by Pinkerton v. United States (1946) holding that a member of a conspiracy is liable for all offenses committed in furtherance of the conspiracy.
Verticales
An intent to commit a crime coupled with an act taken toward committing the offense.
A defense allowed in some jurisdictions when, although the defendant intended to commit a crime, it was impossible to do so because the completed act is not a crime.
This rule holds that two people cannot conspire to commit a crime such as adultery, incest, or bigamy inasmuch as these offenses necessarily require two participants; they cannot be committed by one person acting alone.
A crime that is the object of an attempt, solicitation, or conspiracy.
A significant movement toward completion of an intended result.