Michigan v. Kowalski
Annotate this CaseAt issue before the Supreme Court was whether Defendant Edward Kowalski's convictions of accosting a minor to commit an immoral act and using a computer as means to accomplish that act should have been overturned because of an error in jury instructions. The Court of Appeals ruled that the convictions should be overturned. The instructions given at trial did not properly instruct the jury on the actus reus of the applicable statute, and as such were given in error. Upon review of the trial record and the applicable legal authority, the Supreme Court concluded that regardless of whether Defendant waived review of the jury instructions, they were not an "outcome-determinative" error. Sufficient evidence was presented at trial to support the jury's verdict. The Court reversed the appellate court and reinstated Defendant's convictions.
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