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King v. Commonwealth
Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1988.
Author: Jim
Facts: King (D) and a co-pilot
Bailey were transporting 500 pounds of marijuana in a
plane. The plane was flying through mountains and suddenly
it encountered fog. The plane crashed into a mountain,
killing Bailey. D survived the crash.
Procedure: D was charged with
felony-murder of Bailey based on the felony possession of
marijuana.
Issue: Did the trial ct. err by
applying the felony-murder rule to this case?
Holding: Ye
Rule: In order to apply the
felony-murder rule, death must be a consequence of felony
and
not merely coincidence.
Rationale:No causal connection exists
between the felony of drug distribution and the killing by a
plane crash. The crash of the plane was not directly a result of
a act furthering the felony. Just because the plane crashed
at the time D was committing a felony does not mean that the
crash was the result of this felony. If D had been flying the
plane really low to the ground in order to avoid radar
protection, then the felony-murder rule could have applied.
But such facts are not available in this case.
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