Criminal Law 2 Reviewer San Beda ❲EASY EDITION❳

Technically a special law, but usually included. Fencing is buying stolen goods. The reviewer notes: Fencing is different from Aaccessory to Robbery. An accessory knows the crime happened; a fence just should have known (presumption).

Yes. A is liable for homicide under Art. 249. The fact that the victim would have died shortly from a pre-existing illness does not break the causal connection between the felonious act and the death. The offender takes the victim as he finds him (the “thin skull rule” – People v. Abello ). The supervening event (terminal illness) does not absolve A. However, it may be considered a mitigating circumstance under Art. 13(7) – that the victim’s illness facilitated the commission of the offense. criminal law 2 reviewer san beda

Note: The homicide includes murder, parricide, or simple homicide. It is a single indivisible penalty (Reclusion Perpetua to Death - now R.P. per RA 9346). Doctrine (People v. Sillas, et al.): Even if the killing occurred during flight after the robbery, as long as it is part of the same criminal impulse, it is still Robbery with Homicide. Q: What if the homicide was not intended? A: Still liable. The crime is essentially robbery, the homicide is an aggravating component. Technically a special law, but usually included

Common bar topics in this subject include: An accessory knows the crime happened; a fence

The San Beda reviewer organizes the 67 articles (Art. 114–367) into 14 titles. The most heavily tested and reviewed topics include:

The San Beda College of Law Criminal Law 2 Reviewer (often a red or white-covered compendium from the Centralized Bar Operations or a similar academic committee) is not merely a summary of the Revised Penal Code (RPC). It is a designed for the second semester of Criminal Law. While Criminal Law 1 covers Book 1 of the RPC (general principles, felonies, circumstances affecting criminal liability, persons criminally liable, penalties, extinction of liability), Criminal Law 2 covers Book 2 of the RPC – specific felonies and their elements, as well as relevant special penal laws.