Priming effects

Questions

Priming effects

After 10 yeаrs оf mаrriаge, Ann has tоld Bоb that she no longer loves him and wants a divorce. Bob, who is heartbroken, has moved out of the home they used to share. He is quite low on money and is furious that Ann won’t give him back her wedding ring and the other expensive jewelry he gave her. (Why should she get to keep the jewelry after rejecting him?)   Bob asks his friend Carl to help him get back the wedding ring and certain other pieces of jewelry, by breaking into her home while Ann is out of town. (Bob knows that Ann has a business trip coming up during a particular week.) Bob assures Carl that Ann won’t be home and that the home does not have an alarm system. Bob also tells Carl exactly where to find Ann’s jewelry box. (Carl, as a friend of Bob, has also been in the home previously and is familiar with it.) Carl is reluctant at first, but he eventually agrees, particularly after Bob offers him $500 to help him get back the jewelry. Bob assures Carl that the lock on the back patio sliding door is broken, which will make it easy for Carl to enter the home.   On the night designated by Bob, Carl parks a block away, walks to the home, and goes into the backyard to come in through the patio door. Unbeknownst to the men, however, Ann has had the patio door lock fixed and has installed a silent alarm system in the home.  When Carl finds the sliding patio door locked, he looks around for something to help him open it. He eventually finds a metal garden tool and is able to wedge open the door. Once inside the home, Carl is able to quickly locate Ann’s jewelry box, and he is just starting to go through it when he hears the sirens of an approaching police car. Carl puts down the jewelry box (without taking anything) and exits through the back patio door. But the police have already arrived and see Carl walking toward the front yard. When they order him to “freeze,” Carl panics and tries to run away. He is then shot in the back by two police officers and dies at the scene. Police recover Carl’s cell phone from his pocket, which contains a long text exchange between Carl and Bob about their plan for that night. Police then arrest Bob. “Burglary” in the jurisdiction is defined as “breaking and entering a dwelling with the intent to commit a felony inside.” (Note: opening a closed door and forcing/creating any kind of “opening” into a home/dwelling all count as a “breaking” in the jurisdiction.)   Bob is charged with the following crimes:  (1) Solicitation of Burglary, (2) Conspiracy to Commit Burglary, (3) Burglary, and (4) Murder. The jurisdiction takes a Model Penal Code approach to Solicitation (MPC § 5.02), Conspiracy (MPC § 5.03), and Accomplice liability (MPC § 2.06(3)), but a traditional common law approach to Murder (and a proximate cause approach to felony murder). *Analyze whether Bob has committed each of the 4 charged crimes. Note the required mens rea and actus reus for each crime, whether or not Bob committed the crime at issue, and explain why or why not. You do not need to quote the entire MPC rule for the MPC crimes. Focus on the relevant aspects of the MPC crimes/approach. *Conclude by stating which crime(s) Bob would most likely be actually convicted of, assuming that the State is able to prove the facts as described above.

Lооk аt the X-Rаy imаge belоw. What LANDMARK and BONE is fractured? [A] Name ONE MOVEMENT that would be affected by this injury based on what muscles would ORIGINATE here. [B]