Robertson v. Commonwealth

KELLER, Justicej

dissenting.

Although I agree with the majority’s holding that the trial court properly denied Appellant’s motion for a directed verdict of acquittal, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision to affirm Appellant’s conviction. I would remand the case for a new trial because — to use the majority’s own words — the trial court’s homicide instructions did “not sufficiently frame the issue of causation as defined in KRS 501.060.”1 In addition, I am greatly troubled that the sample instructions outlined in the majority opinion permit a jury to find a defendant guilty of Second-Degree Manslaughter or Reckless Homicide without finding that the defendant acted either wantonly or recklessly as those terms are defined in KRS 501.020. In contrast to the majority’s view that the Kentucky Penal Code’s causation provisions furnish an “alternative for finding guilt,”2 I believe that KRS 501.060(2) and (3) place a further limitation on the imposition of criminal liability in addition to the requirement of a culpable mental state. Thus, those provisions “adopt criteria for determining when factual causation is insufficient for holding a defendant responsible for the results of his conduct (i.e., ... ‘legal causation’).”3 Accordingly, I challenge the majority’s conclusion that Appellant suffered no prejudice from the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury as to KRS 501.060’s limitations on criminal liability, and I would reverse Appellant’s conviction for Second-Degree Manslaughter and remand the case to the trial court for a new trial.

KRS 507.040(1) defines the offense of Second-Degree Manslaughter and states, in relevant part, “[a] person is guilty of manslaughter in the second degree when he wantonly causes the death of another person ....”4 Until today, this Court has always held that “wantonly” as used in KRS 507.040(1) refers to the definition of the “wantonly” culpable mental state contained in KRS 501.020(3). Because the instruction proposed by the majority opinion employs the disjunctive “OR” between subparagraphs (A) and (B), however, a jury could find a defendant guilty of Second-Degree Manslaughter under the proposed instruction without ever finding that the defendant was “aware of and consciously disregardfed] a substantial and unjustifiable risk”5 that his conduct would result in another’s death or that “[t]he risk [was] of such nature and degree that disregard thereof constituted a gross devia*841tion from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the situation.”6 Although subparagraph (A) defines “wantonly” substantially in accordance with KRS 501.020(3) — omitting, however, the “of such nature and degree” language — the instruction permits a jury to return a guilty verdict under subpara-graph (B), which incorporates language from KRS 501.060 and reads “[t]hat the death of Michael Partin occurred in a manner that the Defendant knew was rendered substantially more probable by his conduct,” without determining that Appellant acted wantonly with respect to Officer Partin’s death. While subparagraph (B) substantially paraphrases KRS 501.020(3)’s “knowingly” culpable mental state,7 the culpable mental state required for Second-Degree Manslaughter is “wantonly,” not “knowingly.” And, unlike the other culpable mental states in KRS 501.020, the “knowingly” mental state “cannot serve as the culpable mental state for an offense having a prohibited result as its essential element.”8 While I have focused here upon the majority’s proposed Second-Degree Manslaughter instruction, I would criticize its proposed Reckless Homicide instruction for the same reasons. Accordingly, I believe that the majority’s proposed jury instructions as well as its disposition of this appeal betray a misunderstanding of KRS 501.060.

KRS 501.060 defines the causal relationships for which the Kentucky Penal Code permits the imposition of criminal sanctions:

(1) Conduct is the cause of a result when it is an antecedent without which the result in question would not have occurred.
(2) When intentionally causing a particular result is an element of an offense, the element is not established if the actual result is not within the intention of the contemplation of the actor unless:
(a) The actual result differs from that intended or contemplated, as the case may be, only in the respect that a different person or different property is injured or affected or that the injury or harm intended or contemplated would have been more serious or more extensive; or
(b) The actual result involves the same kind of injury or harm as that intended or contemplated and occurs in a manner which the actor knows or should know is rendered substantially more probable by his conduct.
(3) When wantonly or recklessly causing a particular result is an element of an offense, the element is not established if the actual result is not within the risk of which the actor is aware or, in the ease of recklessness, of which he should be aware unless:
(a) The actual result differs from the probable result only in the respect *842that a different person or different property is injured or that the probable injury or harm would have been more serious or more extensive than .that caused; or
(b) The actual result involves the same kind of injury or harm as the probable result and occurs in a manner which the actor knows or should know is rendered substantially more probable by his conduct.
(4) The question of whether an actor knew or should have known the result he caused was rendered substantially more probable is an issue of fact.9

KRS 501.060’s provisions relating to legal causation were adapted from Model Penal Code § 2.03, and, KRS 501.060(2)(b) and (3)(b), like the corresponding provisions in the Model Penal Code,10 are designed “to exclude situations in which the manner in which the actual result occurs, or the nature of the actual result, is so remote from the actor’s purpose or contemplation that it should have no bearing on the gravity of the offense for which he is convicted.”11 The 1974 Commentary to KRS 501.060 reflects that the drafters of *843the Kentucky Penal Code recognized that, under some circumstances, an actor with a requisite culpable mental state could, under a “but-for” analysis, factually “cause” a prohibited result, but should not be criminally sanctioned for that result:

This section deals with one of the most difficult problems in criminal law, that of causation. For an intelligible description of this provision and its purposes, a general statement of the law of causation to serve as a frame of reference is essential. That statement should begin with this proposition: any antecedent which contributes to a given result can be said as a matter of fact to have caused that result. For example, the birth of a person can be said to have caused his death even though the immediate death-causing act was one of shooting. In distinguishing between antecedents which should receive juridi-cial consideration as a cause in penal law and those which should not, the courts have classified causes as remote and proximate with only the latter sufficing for criminal liability. To be classified as a “proximate cause,” generally recognized as a flexible standard, an antecedent must constitute a “substantial factor” in bringing about the result in issue....
Once an act is found to be a cause in fact of a result and a substantial factor in bringing about that result, it is recognized as the proximate cause unless another cause, independent of the first, intervenes between the first and the result. And even then the first cause is treated as the proximate cause if the harm or injury resulting from the second is deemed to have been reasonably foreseeable by the first actor.
In attempting to deal with this law and the problem it represents. KRS 501.060, in its first subsection, starts with a simple rule of causation and an underlying judgment that many of the matters now treated as “causation” questions should be dealt with as problems of mens rea. The reason for this judgment can be best shown by use of the first example of the second preceding paragraph. It can be said that a person who gave birth to the victim of a homicide caused the death of that victim even though the immediate death-causing act was committed by another. Without the birth of the victim, the result in question would not have occurred. However, under no theory of mens rea can it be said that the mother of the victim had a criminal state of mind in causing the death. By treating such matters as mens rea problems, subsection (1) eliminates the need of distinguishing between “remote” and “proximate” causes and the difficulty inherent in the distinction.
Subsection (2) deals in specific teims with the situation in which an actual result of criminal conduct varies from the result intended by a defendant. It first establishes a general principle that when such variation exists, “intentionally,” as the essential element of culpability, cannot be shown. Then the subsection creates two exceptions to the general principle. The first of which provides for two instances in which a variation between actual results and intended results is inconsequential: when the variation is that a different person or different property than intended is injured or affected by the criminal act (e.g., D. shoots at A with intent to kill him but instead kills B); and when the variation involves an actual injury or harm less serious or extensive than *844what was intended (e.g., D. shoots at V, intending to kill him, but instead only injures him). The second exception to the general principle deals with the situation where an actual injury is the same as an intended injury but occurs in an “unintended” manner. To illustrate: suppose that D shoots his wife with intent to kill; that while in a hospital for treatment she contracts an unrelated disease, and that she ultimately dies as a result of that disease. Under pre-existing doctrine, D’s responsibility for this result depended upon whether the disease was considered an “independent intervening cause” and, if so, whether the result it caused was considered to have been “reasonably foreseeable.” Under this subsection, D’s responsibility depends on whether the triers of fact find that his wife’s death occurred in a manner which he knew or should have known was rendered substantially more probable by his conduct. With this change in approach there is an express acknowledgment [subsection (4) ] that the ultimate responsibility for determining whether an actual result is too far removed from an intended result to impose criminal liability must be left for the triers of fact.
Subsection (3) deals in specific terms with the situation in which an actual result of criminal conduct is outside a risk of which an actor was aware, if he acted wantonly, or of which he should have been aware, if he acted recklessly. It has the same general principle and the same exception as contained in subsection (2); therefore the matters stated in the preceding paragraph are equally applicable to this subsection.12

I believe it is important to emphasize that KRS 501.060 acts as a limitation on criminal liability in situations where a defendant otherwise intentionally, wantonly, or recklessly causes another person’s death or physical injury or damage to property. KRS 501.060 represents a legislative policy determination that “[w]hen the requirement of ‘proximate causation’ dissociates the actor’s conduct from a result of which it is a but-for cause, ... the actor’s culpability with respect to the result ... is such that it would be unjust to permit the result to influence his liability or the gravity of his offense.”13 In other words, “legal causation,” although now conceptualized by KRS 501.060 as an issue of mens rea or culpability, nevertheless operates to exclude criminal liability in cases where the defendant would otherwise have committed an offense, but “common sense notions of responsibility for the occurrence of results”14 dictate that the imposition of criminal liability is inappropriate.

In Lofthouse v. Commonwealth,15 this Court observed that KRS 501.060(3) frames the issue of causation “in terms of whether or not the result as it occurred was either foreseen or foreseeable by the defendant as a reasonable probability.”16 For instance, a defendant who shoots a rifle at his wife with the intention of killing her will- — absent some other consideration such as a belief in the need to resort to self protection — be liable for Murder if a bullet *845strikes and kills her. KRS 501.060(2)(b), however, would likely exclude homicide liability in many cases where the defendant’s aim was poor, but the defendant’s conduct was nonetheless technically a “but-for” cause of his wife’s death — e.g., where, because of the defendant’s attempt upon her life, the wife vacates the marital residence and moves to a new home in the country and is later killed in a fall from a horse17 or perishes in a fire when her new home burns down.18 And, while a drunken driver may commit Second-Degree Manslaughter by consciously ignoring the risk that he might kill the occupants of another vehicle in a collision if a collision and death occur, KRS 501.060(3)(b) requires a jury to address foreseeability issues if the drunken driver collides with another vehicle without causing injury to the second vehicle’s occupants, but those occupants are pinned within their vehicle and later devoured by a passing ravenous bear.19

Accordingly, where the evidence at trial presents an issue of fact as to whether the manner in which a prohibited result occurred was different from that intended or wantonly ,.or recklessly risked — and only where the evidence presents such an issue — the trial court’s instructions must frame the foreseeability issue for the jury. Because I believe the jury instructions proposed in the majority opinion are erroneous, I believe that the trial court in this case should have instructed the jury substantially as follows:

INSTRUCTION NO. 1
SECOND-DEGREE MANSLAUGHTER
You will find the defendant guilty of Second-Degree Manslaughter under this Instruction if, and only if, you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that in this county on or about January 4, 1998 and before the finding of the indictment herein, he caused the death of Michael Partin by fleeing from police apprehension,
AND
That in so doing:
A. The Defendant was aware of and consciously disregarded a substantial and unjustifiable risk that his conduct would cause Michael Partin to fall to his death through the opening between the roadway and the bridge, and that this risk was of such nature and degree that the Defendant’s disregard of it constituted a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the situation.
OR
B. (1) The Defendant was aware of and consciously disregarded a substantial and unjustifiable risk that his conduct would result in Michael Partin’s death in some manner other than a fall through the opening between the roadway and the bridge, and that this risk was of such nature and degree that the Defendant’s disregard of it constituted a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the situation.
AND
(2) Michael Partin’s death occurred in a manner which Defendant knew or *846should have known was rendered substantially more probable by his conduct.
INSTRUCTION NO. 2
RECKLESS HOMICIDE
You will find the defendant guilty of Reckless Homicide under this Instruction if, and only if, you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that in this county on or about January 4, 1998 and before the finding of the indictment herein, he caused the death of Michael Partin by fleeing from police apprehension,
AND
That in so doing:
A. The Defendant failed to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk that his conduct would cause Michael Par-tin to fall to his death through the opening between the roadway and the bridge, and that this risk was of such nature and degree that the Defendant’s failure to perceive it constituted a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the situation.
OR
B. (1) The Defendant failed to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk that his conduct would result in Michael Partin’s death in some manner other than a fall through the opening between the roadway and the bridge, and that this risk was of such nature and degree that the Defendant’s failure to perceive it constituted a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the situation.
AND (2) Michael Partin’s death occurred in a manner which Defendant knew or should have known was rendered substantially more probable by his conduct.

By proposing instructions that permit a jury to return a guilty verdict upon a finding only that the manner in which the result occurred was either foreseen or foreseeable to the defendant, however, the majority apparently interprets KRS 501.060(3)’s “the element is not established ... unless” language as an alternative formulation of the culpable mental states defined in KRS 500.020(3) and (4). Stated differently, the structure of the majority’s proposed instructions reflects either that the majority has either: (1) overlooked the necessity of requiring a wanton or reckless culpable mental state; (2) concluded that a defendant who acts “knowingly” also acts “wantonly” despite every indication to the contrary in the Kentucky Penal Code; or most likely, (3) has interpreted KRS 501.060(3)’s curious grammar as if it read “the element is established ... when ” and has equated Appellant’s actual or imputed knowledge that the manner in which Michael Partin’s death occurred “was rendered substantially more probable by his conduct” with wantonness and recklessness. I find a number of problems and pitfalls with the majority’s interpretation.

First, other provisions and commentary to the Kentucky Penal Code caution against such an interpretation. Specifically, KRS 500.010(1) defines “culpable mental state” as “ ‘intentionally’ or ‘knowingly’ or ‘wantonly’ or ‘recklessly’ as those terms are defined in KRS 501.020.”20 KRS 501.050 states that a person can be guilty of a criminal offense “without having one (1) of the culpable mental states defined in *847KRS 501.020 ”21 only when the offense is a violation or misdemeanor without a defined culpable mental state22 or when the offense is defined outside of the Kentucky Penal code and “the statute clearly indicates a legislative purpose to impose absolute liability for the conduct described.”23 Second-Degree Manslaughter does not fall within either exception. In addition, the 1974 Commentary to KRS 501.020 reads: “[n]either ‘wantonness’ nor ‘recklessness’ can be used to impose criminality upon conduct unless the following two elements are shown to exist: a substantial and unjustifiable risk that a result described in a penal statute will occur ... and a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the situation.”24 As subparagraph (B) of each the majority’s proposed jury instructions permits a jury to find a defendant guilty of Second-Degree Manslaughter or Reckless Homicide without finding that the defendant acted wantonly or recMessly with respect to the victim’s death, I believe those instructions are erroneous. Simply put, the language of KRS 501.060(3)(b) and KRS 501.020(3) are not interchangeable — a defendant’s conscious disregard or reckless ignorance of a risk he or she knows or should know is rendered substantially more probable by his or her conduct does not necessarily “constitute! ] a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would observe in the situation.”25 Accordingly, the majority’s proposed instructions short-circuit the KRS 501.020 definitions of wantonly and recklessly.

Second, although the specific issue before the Court appears to be a question of first impression, the courts in Arizona— the other jurisdiction that adopted the alternative Model Penal Code version of Subsections (2)(b) and (3)(b) — have conceptualized the “legal causation” inquiry as distinct from the determination of whether the defendant possessed a culpable mental state.26

*848Finally, and perhaps most important, I believe the majority’s interpretation of KRS 501.060(3)’s “the element is not established ... unless” language overlooks KRS 501.060’s identical provision for result offenses requiring an intentional mental state. If, standing alone, actual or imputed knowledge that a result will occur in a manner rendered substantially more probable by the defendant’s conduct constitutes “wantonness” or “recklessness,” what of KRS 501.060(2)(b)?:

When intentionally causing a particular result is an element of an offense, the element is not established if the actual result is not within the intention or the contemplation of the actor unless:
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(b) The actual result involves the same kind of injury or harm as that intended or contemplated and occurs in a manner which the actor knows or should know is rendered substantially more probable by his conduct.27

Stated otherwise, if the majority correctly interprets KRS 501.060(3)(b)’s “the element is not established ... unless” language as an alternative articulation of the “wantonly” and “recklessly” culpable mental states, the same must hold true for KRS 501.060(2)(b), and an actor with actual or imputed knowledge that the manner in which the result actually occurred was rendered substantially more probable by his conduct would also have acted “intentionally.” And, if that is the case, the same jury finding as to foreseeability could constitute two or three different culpable mental states. The logical response to this paradox is that, while the two inquiries are no doubt interrelated, a KRS 501.060(2)(b) or (3)(b) finding is neither interchangeable nor co-extensive with the jury’s determination of the defendant’s culpable mental state. In my opinion, the 1974 Commentary to KRS 501.060 illustrates that the jury’s subsection (2)(b) or (3)(b) foreseeability determination occurs subsequent to its determination of whether a defendant possessed a culpable mental state by intending or risking a prohibited result:

To illustrate: suppose that D shoots his wife with intent to kill; that while in a hospital for treatment she contracts an unrelated disease, and that she ultimately dies as a result of that disease.... Under this subsection, D’s responsibility depends upon whether the triers of fact find that his wife’s death occurred in a manner which he knew or should have known was rendered substantially more probable by his conduct.28

As such, KRS 501.060(2)(b) and (3)(b) require an independent jury determination of foreseeability only after a factual determination has been made that the defendant intended (or wantonly or recklessly risked) the same kind of injury or harm in a different manner. And, as defined by statute, the foreseeability inquiry is the same — whether the defendant “knew or should have known” that the prohibited result was rendered substantially more probable by his conduct — regardless of whether the culpable mental state necessary for a result offense is “intentionally,” “wantonly,” or “recklessly.”

Because I view KRS 501.060(3)(b) not as an “alternative for finding guilt,” but as a separate limitation on the imposition of criminal liability for wantonly or recklessly risked results that occur in unforeseen manners, I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that the trial court’s failure to *849instruct the jury as to the foreseeability question was harmless. KRS 501.060(4) establishes that the question of whether the manner in which Officer Partin was killed was within the foreseeable risks created by Appellant’s conduct “is an issue of fact”29 appropriate for jury resolution. However, the trial court’s instructions in this case neither required nor permitted the jury to answer this factual question, and “[wjhen a jury is not told that it must find that the victim’s death was within the risk created by the defendant’s conduct an element of the crime has been erroneously withdrawn from the jury.”30 The central question at trial in this case was whether Appellant was criminally liable for Officer Partin’s death, and, by omitting the inquiry required by KRS 501.060(3)(b), the trial court’s jury instructions simply failed to present that issue adequately to the jury. As such, the jury could easily have predicated its finding of guilt on its belief that Appellant consciously disregarded not the risk that Officer Partin would fall to his death, but rather a risk that Officer Partin or another officer would be killed in another manner — e.g., by automobile traffic on the bridge (a theory the Commonwealth’s brief advances as support for the trial court’s ruling on Appellant’s motion for directed verdict). Although Appellant did not tender proper jury instructions or otherwise preserve this error for our review, I believe “a substantial possibility exists that the result would have been ... different”31 if the trial court had properly instructed the jury. Thus, I would reverse the judgment of the Kenton Circuit Court and remand this indictment to the trial court for retrial on the charge of Second-Degree Manslaughter under proper instructions.

LAMBERT, C.J. and STUMBO, J., join this dissent.

. Majority Opinion at 750 S.W.3d 432, 433.

. Id. at 838.

. Robert G. Lawson and William H. Fortune, Kentucky Criminal Law, § 2-4(a)(4), at 65 (LEXIS 1998) (hereinafter “Lawson & Fortune”).

. KRS 507.040(1) (emphasis added).

. KRS 501.020(3).

. Id.

. Commonwealth v. Griffin, Ky., 759 S.W.2d 68 (1988).

. Commentary to KRS 501.020 (Banks/Baldwin 1974). The KRS 501.020(1) definition of "intentionally” describes that mental state "with respect to a result or to conduct described by a statute defining an offense[.]” (emphasis added) And, the KRS 501.020(3) & (4) definitions of “wantonly” and "recklessly” describe those mental states "with respect to a result or to a circumstance described by a statute defining an offensef.]” (emphasis added). In contrast, the KRS 501.020(2) definition of "knowingly” does not contain the word "result” and instead describes that mental state "with respect to conduct or to a circumstance defined in a statute defining an offense[.]”

. KRS 501.060.

. The Model Penal Code provisions that correspond to KRS 501.060(2)(b) and (3)(b) and that address variances between the manner in which a prohibited result actually occurred and that contemplated or wantonly or recklessly risked, read:

(2) When purposely or knowingly causing a particular result is an element of an offense, the element is not established if the actual result is not within the purpose or the contemplation of the actor unless:
[[Image here]]
(b) the actual result involves the same kind of injury or harm as that designed or contemplated and is not too remote or accidental in its occurrence to have a [just] bearing on the actors liability or on the gravity of his offense.
(3) When recklessly or negligently causing a particular result is an element of an offense, the element is not established if the actual result is not within the risk of which the actor is aware or, in the case of negligence, of which he should be aware unless:
[[Image here]]
(b) the actual result involves the same kind of injury or harm as the probable result and is not too remote or accidental in its occurrence to have a [just] bearing on the actor’s liability or on the gravity of his offense.

MODEL PENAL CODE § 2.03 (Official Draft and Revised Comments 1985) (hereinafter "MPC”). In contrast, KRS 501.060(2)(b) and (3)(b) utilize language from an alternative draft of the Model Penal Code. See MODEL PENAL CODE § 2.03(2)(b), (3)(b) (Tent. Draft No. 4, 1955) (bracketed alternative formulation). Other than Kentucky, only Arizona has chosen this alternative language. See ARIZ. REV. STAT. ANN. § 13-203 (2001).

.MPC § 2.03, comment 3 at 261 (emphasis added). "Actual result” is a term "meant to be contrasted with the designed or contemplated (or in the case of Subsection (3), the probable) result in terms of its specific character and manner of occurrence.” MPC § 2.03, n. 13. See also Note: Causation in the Model Penal Code, 78 Columbia L.R. 1249, 1266 (1978):

While causation in fact represents a minimum precondition for a finding of liability, it is not in itself sufficient to establish liability, nor does it become adequate when supplemented by the culpability requirements of the offense in question. Hence special provisions are called for that prevent an actor from being held responsible when the outcome of his conduct differs greatly from that anticipated or risked, but that ensure liability when the divergence between the anticipated and actual outcome are sufficiently slight to be legally immaterial.
Id. (footnote omitted); Lawson & Fortune, supra note 3 at § 2-4(c)(3) at 69 ("KRS 501.060 is derived from the Model Code. It adopts one criterion by which causation questions are to be judged, requires no consideration of pre-existing physical conditions (or other specific factors), and clearly lays a foun*843dation for a fresh approach to causation problems in Kentucky.").

. Commentary to KRS 501.060 (Banks/Baldwin 1974).

. MPC § 2.03, comment 2 at 258.

. Note: Causation in the Model Penal Code, supra note 11 at 1260. See also Lawson & Fortune, supra note 3 at § 2-4(c)(3) at 70 (characterizing the KRS 501.060(2) and (3) determination as an "additional inquity into the fairness of holding the defendant accountable for the [result].”).

. Ky., 13 S.W.3d 236 (2000).

. Id. at 239 (quoting Lawson & Fortune, supra note 3 at § 2-4(d)(3) at 74).

. See MPC § 2.03, comment 2 at 258.

. See Note: Causation in the Model Penal Code, supra note 11 at n. 53 (citing MODEL PENAL CODE § 2.03, Comment at 134 (Tent. Draft No. 4, 1955)).

.See United States v. Main, 113 F.3d 1046, 1049 (9th Cir.1997) (using the bear as an example).

. KRS 500.010(1) (emphasis added).

. KRS 501.050 (emphasis added).

. KRS 501.050(1).

. KRS 501.050(2).

. Commentary to KRS 500.020 (Banks/Baldwin 1974) (emphasis added). See also Commentary to KRS 507.020 (Banks/Baldwin 1974):

The two offenses described by these provisions, murder by KRS 507.020(1)(b) and manslaughter in the second degree by KRS 507.040, have three elements in common: the conduct in question must have involved a substantial and unjustifiable risk of death to human life; the defendant, in causing the death in question, must have consciously disregarded that risk, and his disregard must have constituted "a gross deviation from the standard of conduct that a reasonable person would [have observed] in the situation.” Taken together, these three elements constitute the culpable mental state defined in KRS 501.020 as "wantonness” ....

Id. (emphasis added).

. KRS 501.020(3).

. See State v. Marty, 166 Ariz. 233, 801 P.2d 468 (App.1990):

There is abundant evidence in the record that the defendant acted "recklessly” as defined in A.R.S. § 13-105.
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The more difficult question is whether the entire record contains some basis for finding that defendant’s reckless behavior proximately and in fact caused Nuanez’s death. In Arizona, both "but-for” causation and proximate cause must be established in a criminal case.
Id. at 471 (emphasis added and citations deleted). See also State v. Cocio, 147 Ariz. 277, 709 P.2d 1336 (1985) (approving the trial court’s legal causation separate instruction and finding that the trial court's failure to instruct the jury as to A.R.S. § 13-203(C)(2) [Arizona’s parallel provision to KRS 501.060(3)(b) ] was not error because the case did not present a factual discrepancy between the actual and probable risks).

. KRS 501.060(2)(b) (emphasis added).

. Commentary to KRS 501.060 (Banks/Baldwin 1974) (emphasis added).

. KRS 501.060(4).

. United States v. Main, supra note 19 at 1050.

. Jackson v. Commonwealth, Ky.App., 717 S.W.2d 511, 514 (1986).