The law in Pennsylvania cares more about the fact that you wanted to commit a violent crime and then affirmatively acted on that intent, than the fact that the person you wanted to hurt escaped free from harm.
Perhaps nowhere is this more apparent than in the doctrine of transferable intent, which holds a defendant accountable for trying to hurt or kill one person, but harming someone else.
Transferable Intent in Pennsylvania
The concept of transferable intent is fairly straightforward: If you intend to hurt or kill Person A, but you end up hurting or killing Person B, instead, the intent that you had towards Person A transfers to Person B.
You may not have intended to hurt Person B, but the law thinks it sufficient that you intended to hurt Person A.
Crimes Where Intent Can Transfer
Virtually any violent crime that requires intentional conduct can be subject to the doctrine of transferable intent.
Only the most common examples include:
- Simple assault
- Aggravated assault
- Murder
- Manslaughter
In any of these cases, a defendant can be held liable for hurting or killing an innocent bystander, so long as they intended to hurt or kill the targeted victim.
A Classic Example in Pennsylvania: Commonwealth v. Gaynor
An excellent, and succinct, example of transferable intent comes from a 1994 case that went before the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. That case, Commonwealth v. Gaynor, began with a duel-like shootout between two people in an arcade. While neither of the shooters was killed, or even hit, by the bullets, one of the children in the arcade was killed and two others were wounded.
Expert testimony traced the bullets back to the gun used by one of the shooters. He was convicted of first-degree murder for the intentional killing of the child, as well as for both simple and aggravated assault for intentionally hurting the other two children he had shot.
While much of the court's attention was paid to the shooter who did not hit the children and whether he should be held liable for murder, as well, the doctrine of transferable intent was settled. While the shooter didn't mean to kill those people, it was enough that he intended to kill.
How Does This Apply to Stray Bullets?
Transferable intent comes up again and again in situations where someone shoots a gun at someone else, misses, and hits a bystander standing somewhere behind their intended target. Only just recently, a woman was hit by a stray bullet in Philadelphia while walking her dog.
Just like in the arcade shootout, when innocent bystanders get hit and hurt, the intent to kill someone does not disappear.
LLF Law Firm: Criminal Defense in Philadelphia
LLF's Criminal Law Team are criminal defense lawyers in Philadelphia who serve people who have been accused of a crime. Contact us online or call our law office at 888-535-3686 for the legal help you need to raise the defenses necessary to combat a serious criminal charge and protect your future.
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