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What is the prosecution's responsibility relative to the corpus delicti in obtaining a conviction for any crime? Can a corpus delicti be proven by a confession or admission of a defendant? Explain your response.

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Answer:

The prosecution's responsibility relative to the corpus delicti in obtaining a conviction for any crime is to provide sufficient evidence that a crime was committed.

According to the EVIDENCE § 640 (11th ed. 1935), corpus delicti cannot be proven by a defendant's confession or admission. It remains the responsibility of the prosecution to provide enough evidence for the commission of a crime. It is only a defendant's voluntary confession that can be admitted as evidence. However, each judge is expected to weigh the confessional evidence.

Step-by-step explanation:

Corpus delicti refers to a criminal justice principle that requires sufficient facts to be gathered as evidence to prove that a crime had been committed. This implies that corpus delicti is the body of evidence or facts and not a dead body as wrongfully construed sometimes.

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