Stephenson v. State
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (March 2022) |
Stephenson v. State | |
---|---|
Court | Indiana Supreme Court |
Full case name | Stephenson v. State of Indiana |
Decided | January 19, 1932 |
Citation(s) | 179 N.E. 633; 205 Ind. 141 |
Court membership | |
Judges sitting | David Myers, Julius Travis, Clarence R. Martin, Curtis Roll, Walter Treanor |
Case opinions | |
Decision by | Per curiam |
Concurrence | Myers, Travis, Roll |
Concur/dissent | Treanor, Martin |
Stephenson v. State, Indiana Supreme Court, 179 N.E. 633 (Ind. 1932), is a criminal case involving causation in criminal law, significant for its political and legal consequences.[1] In 1925, David Curtiss Stephenson, leader of the Ku Klux Klan in Indiana abducted Madge Oberholtzer, injured her, and repeatedly raped her.[1] She ingested poison and later died. Publicity for the case may have reversed ascendency of the Klan nationally.[1] The case is legally significant in that it found "if a defendant engaged in the commission of a felony such as rape... inflicts upon his victim both physical and mental injuries, the natural and probable result of which would render the deceased mentally irresponsible and suicide followed, we think he would be guilty of murder".[1]
References
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- Indiana state case law
- U.S. state criminal case law
- 1932 in Indiana
- Murder in Indiana
- Ku Klux Klan in Indiana
- 20th-century American trials
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- 1932 in United States case law
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