Solicitation

Certain crimes are anticipatory in nature; Accordingly, a person can still incur criminal liability, even if the target crime is not completed. These are called inchoate crimes. The inchoate crimes are solicitation, attempt, and conspiracy. All of these crimes require a specific intent to commit the target offense.

When you entice, encourage, request, urge, or command someone to commit a crime, you can be found guilty of solicitation. Even though there is an anticipatory element involved, the fact that you had the specific intent to cause a crime to be committed incurs criminal liability. Moreover, the crime is completed at the moment you make the request. For example, if you request someone to embezzle funds from his employer, you are instantly guilty of solicitation of the crime of embezzlement. Usually, there are no defenses that exist for the crime of solicitation. However, if you can prove you did not have the specific intent to do the crime of which you are charged, this element will be missing from the prosecution's case, and you should be found not guilty.

Our Southern California criminal attorney serves greater Orange County in communities such as Newport Beach, Santa Ana, Irvine, Westminster, Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach, and Laguna Beach and routinely appears in the local courts such as the Orange County Central Courthouse (Santa Ana Court), Newport Beach Courthouse (Harbor Justice Center), Westminster Courthouse, Fullerton Court, Los Angeles Courts, North County San Diego Courthouse (Vista Court), Riverside Courts, and Long Beach Courthouse. Contact an Orange County criminal attorney in our Newport Beach office for further help with your Southern California criminal law charges.

Read More About Crminal Law

Online Legal Reference


Defenses to Inchoate Crimes

A defendant may assert a defense of impossibility. He may, for instance, argue that the target offense could not possibly have occurred, no matter how hard the defendant worked to commit it. If he argues that the impossibility was based on the fact that what the defendant was about to commit was not in fact a crime, he is asserting the defense of legal impossibility. At common law, and today, legal impossibility is a complete defense to both conspiracy and attempt. For example, if you and your friend make an agreement to have sex with a 19-year-old woman, neither of you can be found guilty of statutory rape, because having sex with a 19-year-old woman is not a crime.

However, a defense of factual impossibility will not be successful under traditional common law rules, nor in today's jurisdictions. The defense of factual impossibility is asserted when the defendant argues that, after agreeing to commit, or attempting to commit the target offense, it was impossible for him to complete the crime because of facts unknown to him at the time of the agreement, or at the time he attempted the crime. The reason this is no defense is that, had the facts been as the defendant believed them to be, the target crime would have actually occurred. So, factual impossibility is never a defense to conspiracy or attempt.

Another defense that can be asserted is withdrawal. A defendant may assert that he withdrew from the conspiracy, and thus should not be found guilty of conspiracy. He can assert a similar argument against a charge of attempt. In jurisdictions that follow the common law, withdrawal is no defense to criminal conspiracy or criminal attempt. As an example, suppose you conspired to commit larceny in the victim's hotel room. Just before entering the hotel lobby, you got cold feet and communicated your desire to withdraw from the planned crime. At common law, even if you turned and ran away, meaning you actually withdrew and the co-conspirators went ahead with the crime, you will still be found liable for both the conspiracy (to commit larceny) and for the completed crime of larceny, because of your earlier agreement.

There are some jurisdictions that today recognize a withdrawal defense under the Model Penal Code. These jurisdictions hold that a complete, effective withdrawal from a planned crime can limit a defendant's liability to the point where he effectively withdrew. The defendant, although guilty of the conspiracy, will not be found liable for subsequent crimes. For example, a defendant who communicates his withdrawal from a conspiracy to commit arson to the other conspirators, and even works to hinder the occurrence of the target crime, such as by notifying the police and fire station, will not be found liable in these jurisdictions if the conspiracy results in the intended arson.

Criminal Defense Attorney

Orange County Criminal Attorney

  1. Criminal Law
  2. Criminal Defense
  3. DUI Law
  4. Suspended License Violations
  5. Drug Offenses
  6. Domestic Violence
  7. Assualt
  8. Battery
  9. Larceny
  10. Robbery
  11. Burglary
  12. Probation Violations
  13. Bench Warrants
  14. Bail Hearings
  15. Criminal Trials
  16. Expungement
  17. Evidence
  18. Disorderly Conduct

Experienced Attorney



Years of Attorney Experience including Trial, Law & Motion, Discovery and legal experience in court with Criminal Defense, DUI, and Drug Offenses. If you require additional help from a criminal defense attorney, please contact a lawyer in our Orange County office located in Newport Beach, California, and serving communities such as Newport Beach, Santa Ana, Irvine, Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach, Fullerton, Westminster, and Laguna Beach. We are here to help with your criminal defense.

Vincent J RussoCalifornia Attorney

Orange County Criminal Attorney with years of courtroom experience

Orange County Criminal Attorney Vincent J Russo has years of attorney experience.


Vincent J Russo
Attorney at Law

5020 Campus Drive
Newport Beach, CA 92660
949-474-7799

Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Site Map