CRIMINAL LAW
CRIMINAL LAW
SUMMARY
PX SOLUTIONS
Sources used
INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINAL LAW
Elements of an offence
Actus reus: physical element
Concurrence
Continuing act approach
Voluntariness
Causation
Subjective or Objective?
MENS REA: THE MENTAL ELEMENT
General principles
The subjective mental states
Basic intent crimes
Mistake
Mens Rea
Strict liability and Criminal Negligence
The 4th possible fault element: Criminal Negligence
Standard
Strict and Absolute Liability
HOMICIDE
Actus reus
Is the victim a ‘human’?
Commencement of existence
Murder
Mens rea
Doctrine of transferred malice
Manner of death
Felony/Constructive Murder
Manslaughter
Mens rea
1. Unlawful and dangerous act
2. Manslaughter by criminal negligence
ASSAULT
Actus reus
Conditional Threats
Reasonable Apprehension
Victim’s State of Mind
Mens rea
Hostility
Negligent Assault
Aggravated Assault & relevant Mens Rea
Spreading Disease as an Assault
Other Non Fatal Offences: wounding or inflicting grievous bodily harm
Consent
SEXUAL OFFENCES
Actus Reus For Rape
Absence of consent
Meaning of consent
Vitiation of consent: fraud and mistake
Medical fraud and consent
Consent in fear and terror
Immunities
The ACT provisions on consent
Mens Rea For Rape
The meanings of recklessness: culpable advertence and inadvertence
Reform in Victoria
Indecency Offences
Actus Reus For Indecency Offences
What constitutes an act of indecency?
Mens Rea For Indecency Offences
Child sexual assault
INTOXICATION
Intoxication in relation to murder and manslaughter
Intoxication in relation to the reasonable person test
Intoxication and the actus reus of an offence
DEFENCES
Distinction:
Provocation
Generally
Burden
First Test: D must be provoked to kill by an act that constitutes provocation
Second Test: Subjective loss of self control
Third Test
Battered Wife Syndrome
SELF DEFENCE
Burden
Recklessness
Reasonableness
Lawfulness of victim’s actions
Proportionality
No requirement of retreat.
No requirement of imminence
Battered women
MISTAKE, MENS REA AND STRICT LIABILITY
STATUTORY INTERPRETATION
Relevance of Intoxication
WHICH ONE?
Presumption of mens rea
Has the presumption been displaced?
PROPERTY OFFENCES (in the ACT)
Dishonestly
Appropriating
Property
Belonging to another
Theft through obtaining property by deception in the ACT
DECEPTION
What is deception?
What constitutes deception?
Fact or law?
What constitutes false pretences?
Operative Deception
Miscellaneous
Stolen vehicles - joyrides
Temporary removal of articles on public display
Obtaining financial advantage by deception in the ACT
Obtaining Service By Deception In The A.C.T.
Making Off Without Payment In The A.C.T.
ATTEMPTS
Policy of attempt
Mens Rea Of Attempts
Intent
Actus Reus Of Attempts
Defence Of Withdrawal/Abandonment
Impossible Attempts
PARTIES TO A CRIME
Liability of individuals who assist or encourage others to commit an offence
3 types
COMPLICITY – A Derivative Form Of Liability
Consequences of this derivative nature
Actus reus
Defence of Withdrawal/Abandonment
Mens Rea For Complicity
Knowledge
Acting In Concert
COMMON PURPOSE (Distinction Between Acting In Concert)
Mens Rea
Defence Of Withdrawal/Abandonment
HOMICIDE
Homicide = offences which cause fatal harm.
- Murder
- Manslaughter
(actus reus is the same for these two offences ; mens rea is different)
Homicide may be lawful where the killing was done in self-defence.
Actus reus
Actus reus of murder and manslaughter = causing the death of another person.
Is the victim a ‘human’?
Commencement of existence
Determining whether a child has achieved separate existence from the body of its mother is a matter for the jury [see s.20 Crimes Act 1900 (NSW)] ; s.10, Crimes Act 1900 (ACT)]
If a child is injured in the womb, and is born alive, but dies shortly after, a charge of murder or manslaughter may be laid against the person who causes the injury [West].
NSW, infanticide is a special category of manslaughter: see s 22A, Crimes Act 1900.
Cessation of existence
In NSW, the Act deems a person to be dead if there is an (a) irreversible cessation of
all function of the brain or (b) irreversible cessation of blood circulation. (s. 33 Human Tissue Act 1983 (NSW)).
Murder
The offence of Murder requires
- an intention to kill; or
- an intention to inflict grievous bodily harm; or
- recklessness.
s. 18, Crimes Act 1900 (NSW).
18. (1) (a) Murder shall be taken to have been committed where the act of the accused, or thing by him omitted to be done, causing the death charged was done or omitted with reckless indifference to human life, or with intent to kill or inflict grievous bodily harm upon some person, or done in an attempt to commit, or during or immediately after the commission, by the accused, or some accomplice with him, of a crime punishable by penal servitude for life or for 25 years.
(b) Every other punishable homicide shall be taken to be manslaughter.
(2)(a) No act or omission which was not malicious, or for which the accused had lawful cause or excuse, shall be within this section.
(b) No punishment or forfeiture shall be incurred by any person who kills another by misfortune only, or in his own defence.
Punishment for murder in the NSW is contained in ss.19A.
Mens rea
Mens rea is defined by s. 18, Crimes Act NSW.
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