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89 Tex. L. Rev. 291 (2010-2011)
Competing Theories of Blackmail: An Empirical Research Critique of Criminal Law Theory

handle is hein.journals/tlr89 and id is 297 raw text is: Competing Theories of Blackmail: An Empirical
Research Critique of Criminal Law Theory
Paul H. Robinson,* Michael T. Cahill
&  Daniel M. Bartels
The crime of blackmail has risen to national media attention because of
the David Letterman case, but this wonderfully curious offense has long been
the favorite of clever criminal law theorists. It criminalizes the threat to do
something that would not be criminal if one did it. There exists a rich liter-
ature on the issue, with many prominent legal scholars offering their
accounts. Each theorist has his own explanation as to why the blackmail
offense exists. Most theories seek to justify the position that blackmail is a
moral wrong and claim to offer an account that reflects widely shared moral
intuitions. But the theories make widely varying assertions about what those
shared intuitions are, while also lacking any evidence to support the
assertions.
This Article summarizes the results of an empirical study designed to
test the competing theories of blackmail to see which best accords with pre-
vailing sentiment. Using a variety of scenarios designed to isolate and test
the various criteria different theorists have put forth as the key to
blackmail, this study reveals which (if any) of the various theories of
blackmail proposed to date truly reflects laypeople's moral judgment.
Blackmail is not only a common subject of scholarly theorizing but also
a common object of criminal prohibition. Every American jurisdiction
criminalizes blackmail, although there is considerable variation in its
formulation. The Article reviews the American statutes and describes the
three general approaches these provisions reflect. The empirical study of lay
intuitions also allows an assessment of which of these statutory approaches
* Colin S. Diver Professor of Law, University of Pennsylvania Law School. We thank Mitch
Berman, Leo Katz, George Fletcher, and Jim Lindgren for helping us better understand their
theories for this study. We also thank Adam Kolber for his useful contributions and Matthew
Majarian, University of Pennsylvania Law School Class of 2011, for exceptional research
assistance.
** Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Professor of Law, Brooklyn Law School. Work
on this Article was supported by a summer research stipend from Brooklyn Law School, for which
Professor Cahill thanks the School and Dean (now President) Joan G. Wexler. Professor Cahill also
thanks Paul Means, Rosalyn Scaff, Christopher Serkin, Nelson Tebbe, Ben Trachtenberg, Mary
Willis White, and Saul Zipkin for field testing our survey instrument and its manipulation checks
to help ensure the scenarios were presented in a way that captured the relevant distinctions.
***Assistant Professor of Marketing, Columbia University Graduate School of Business.

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