State v. Boehm

Court of Appeals of Wisconsin
127 Wis. 2d 351, 1985 Wisc. App. LEXIS 3830, 379 N.W.2d 874 (1985)
ELI5:

Rule of Law:

Under Wisconsin's solicitation statute, voluntary renunciation or withdrawal is not a defense to the crime of solicitation. The crime is considered complete once the defendant, with the requisite intent, advises another to commit a felony.


Facts:

  • Lynn Boehm solicited Larry Poor to murder Ron Hitchler.
  • In a taped conversation, Poor told Boehm he needed a 30/30 rifle and $1,000 to carry out the murder.
  • Boehm responded to Poor's request by stating, 'I will definitely.'
  • At a later date, no later than January 25, 1983, Boehm informed Poor that she was 'done with' the plan and that 'the whole thing was off.'
  • The murder of Ron Hitchler was never committed.

Procedural Posture:

  • Lynn Boehm was charged with soliciting first-degree murder in a Wisconsin trial court.
  • At trial, Boehm's counsel requested a jury instruction on the affirmative defense of renunciation, arguing that she had voluntarily abandoned her criminal purpose.
  • The trial court refused to provide the requested jury instruction.
  • Boehm was convicted of solicitation of first-degree murder.
  • Boehm appealed the judgment of conviction to the Wisconsin Court of Appeals.

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Issue:

Is voluntary renunciation or withdrawal a valid defense to the crime of solicitation under Wisconsin Statutes sec. 939.30, once the solicitation has been completed?


Opinions:

Majority - Gartzke, P. J.

No. Voluntary renunciation or withdrawal is not a defense to the completed crime of solicitation under Wisconsin law. The court reasoned that the crime of solicitation is complete at the moment the defendant, with criminal intent, advises another person to commit a felony. The Wisconsin statute defining solicitation, sec. 939.30, does not provide for a renunciation defense. The statute Boehm relied upon, sec. 939.05(2)(c), provides a withdrawal defense for being a party to a crime (e.g., conspiracy or aiding and abetting), but it does not apply to the direct commission of the substantive crime of solicitation itself. Because the crime was already complete, a subsequent change of mind cannot legally undo it, and the court of appeals lacks the authority to create a non-statutory defense.



Analysis:

This decision solidifies the legal principle that solicitation is an inchoate crime completed upon its utterance with the necessary intent, rather than upon the commission of the solicited act. By rejecting the renunciation defense, the court distinguishes solicitation from other preparatory offenses like conspiracy, where withdrawal is a statutory defense. This ruling establishes a clear point of no return for criminal liability in solicitation cases in Wisconsin, emphasizing that the harm lies in the act of soliciting itself, regardless of whether the solicited crime is ultimately prevented by the solicitor.

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