Title: Developments in Criminal Law
1Developments in Criminal Law
2Sources of Criminal Law
- Pepper v Hart (that a Govt Ministers statements
may be used to assist interpretation) - Should not be applied in construing an ambiguous
criminal provision to enlarge the scope of
liability Thet v DPP - May be prayed in aid by the defence R v Tabnak
3Interpretation
- No defence of de minimis in criminal law Scott
(2008) - Partnership - possible for partnership to be
criminally liable in its own right separately
from individuals
4Manslaughter drugs
- D prepares syringe, V self injects what
liability for D? - HL
- If V is fully informed responsible adult there is
never any liability on D (apart from supply) - D has not administered the drug
- Principle that Vs voluntary act breaks the chain
is fundamental - D not liable for s 23 OAPA as Vs act breaks
chain of causation. - No unlawful act manslaughter charge.
5Kennedy No 2 in House of Lords
- Crown could not establish that D administered
(that requires actual injection) - D holding tourniquet for V will not render D
liable Rogers wrongly decided. - NB Burgess 2008 D liable if he assisted in
finding Vs vein. - Nothing said casts doubt on gross negligence
manslaughter still available if D leaves V in
difficulty - Empress Cars restricted to environmental crimes.
6Mens Rea
- G (2003) HL subjective test of recklessness
being widely applied. - G is not to be restricted so as to require D to
have foreseen an obvious and serious risk
Brady
7G, strict liability Article 6
- Art 12 Sexual Offences NI (Order) 2008
- Penile penetration of a child under 13 a strict
liability offence, and belief in consent or the
age of V has no application. - Even where D reasonably believed that the child
was over 16 he commits the offence.
8Duress
- Duress is tested almost exclusively by objective
standards Hasan - Duress is no defence to murder even if killer is
acting as a secondary party and is a child
Wilson - Law Comm - recommend that it should be possible
for the jury to acquit of homicide if D proves
that he took part in a killing only in response
to an imminent threat of death or
life-threatening injury (duress).
9Voluntary exposure to threats
- Ali 2008 EWCA Crim 716
- Robbery by D who pleaded duress
- D had got in with bad company
- D was denied the defence if he had or ought to
have realised that he was exposing himself to the
risk of threats of violence. - No need to prove D was joining a criminal gang
10Doli Incapax DPP v P
- Presumption that child 10-14 has no mischievous
discretion abolished by Art 3 of the Crim Justice
NI Order 1998 - Is the defence itself still available for D
(10-14) who raises some evidence that he did not
know what he was doing was seriously wrong. Crown
must disprove defence. - NO ! R v T (2008)
11Intoxication R v Heard
- Section 3 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 (E W)
/ Art 7 Sexual Offences (NI) Order 2008 - creates an offence of intentional sexual
touching - Voluntary intoxication is no defence to s 3 SOA
2003 (intentional touching) - Wide impact as most SOA cases are intentional
touching/penetration etc
12Heard not so basic?
- Majewski
- Problematical case
- Not clear that all cases can be divided into pure
recklessness or intent - Specific intent is a crime where the intent goes
beyond the immediate actus reus (eg criminal
damage with intent to endanger life). - Look to whether a bolt on/further actus reus
element is present
13Heard the limits
- Person who flails around when drunk and touches V
does so accidentally - Consider liability of
- D who is on LSD trip and touches V ?
- D who makes a drunken error about how close he
will come to touching V? - Does Heard undermine Majewski?
14Private defence
- D can plead a genuine mistake as to the need to
use force in expelling what he thinks is a
burglar. The amount of force used must be
reasonable Faraj (2007)
15Insanity Johnson
- If D knows his act is legally wrong he cannot
plead insanity - CA rejects argument for extending the scope of
the defence of insanity to include acts D knew to
be legally wrong, but thought were morally
justified. - The law remains as settled in R v Windle 1952 2
Q.B. 826.
16Joint Enterprise Liability
- Powell and Daniels, English (1999)
- D, secondary party, liable for murder if
- realised that the principal might kill with
intent to do so, or - realised there was a risk that the principal
might cause gbh with intent. - If fundamentally different acts by P, D not
liable English
17Joint enterprise - issues to resolve
- (i) When does the fundamentally different rule
bite? Is it only when D has not foreseen that P
might kill? - What does fundamentally different mean?
- What effect has a change of mens rea by P?
18- Murder if D intended that P would kill V
intending to kill him - OR
- D realised that P might kill V with intent to
kill him - 2. Did D realise that P might kill V with intent
to cause gbh? - OR
- Did D intend that gbh would be caused to V
- OR
- Did D realise that P might cause gbh to V
intending to cause him such harm - 3. What was P's act which caused the death of V?
- 4. Did D realise P might do this act? If yes,
murder. If no, go to Q 5. - 5. What act or acts did D realise that P might do
to cause V gbh? - 6. Are you sure that the act which D realised P
might do is not fundamentally different to P's
act which caused Vs death? - If yes, guilty of murder. If no, not guilty of
murder.
19Rafferty
- P1 and P2 kill V by drowning. D participate in
earlier gbh attack on V. - D not guilty as a principal as his acts at the
gbh had no causal connection to death - P1 and P2s act was independent and unforeseen
- D not liable as a secondary party
- P1 and P2s act of drowning is fundamentally
different? - D had withdrawn by leaving the scene
20(No Transcript)
21Incitement
- D by text message incites V to engage in sexual
activity. - V is undercover officer so not under 13
- D thinks and intends V is under 13
- D has committed the act of incitement
- But offence entirely in Ds mind?
- D denied defence under s 10 because undercover
officer claims to be under 13
22Incitement
- Serious Crime Act 2007 Part 2
- Abolishes common law incitement
- Replaces with three new offences
- Incredible complexity and technicality
- Very strange overriding defence of reasonableness
- Not yet in force
- A sign of things to come?
23Section 44
- Doing an act capable of encouraging or assisting
the commission of an offence, with intent. - Actus reus
- An act, capable of encouraging, includes hostile
or friendly encouragement - Mens rea
- D intends to assist or encourage
- D reckless as to whether E will have mens rea
- D believes or intends circumstance and
consequences of the full offence
24Section 44
- Defences
- No defence of ignorance of criminal law
- No defence that full crime not committed
- Defence for D to prove he acted reasonably
- Defence if D is the victim of the crime he
intends E to commit - Procedure
- Triable either way
- D can be convicted under s44 even if D is
principal offender
25Section 45
- Doing an act capable of encouraging or assisting
an offence, believing that the offence will be
committed and act will encourage or assist. - Actus reus
- An act, capable of encouraging..
- Mens rea
- Belief acts will assist/encourage
- Belief offence will be committed
- Belief or recklessness as to Es state of mind
- Mens rea as to consequences and circumstances of
the full offence
26Section 46
- Doing an act capable of encouraging or assisting
the commission of one or more of a number of
offences believing one or more will be committed
that act will encourage or assist one or more
of them. - Actus reus
- Doing an act capable of encouraging
- Mens rea
- Belief one offence will be committed
- Belief Ds act will assist/encourage one offence
- Belief or recklessness as to Es mens rea for one
of the offences - Belief or recklessness as to consequences or
circumstances of one offence
27Attempt by omission?
- CA suggests that cannot have attempted murder by
D trying to divert emergency services from V whom
he has injured - Nevard
-
- Why? This looks like an act by D.
28Solicitation to Murder Abu Hamza
- Incitement or solicitation of murder triable here
even if - V is foreigner
- D is foreigner
- Incitee is a foreigner
- Proposed killing is to be committed abroad
29Causing/allowing death of child etc
- D must be member of same household as V in
frequent contact with V (s.5(4)). - V must be at a significant risk of serious
physical harm (s.5(6)) Significant is an
ordinary English word Mujuru - (i) Causing death
- Unlawful act (ie offence s.5(5))
- (ii) Allowing death
- Death from unlawful act
- D aware of/ought to have been aware of risk
- D failed to take such steps as he could
reasonably have been expected to take to protect
V from the risk
30Infanticide
- There is no requirement that all the ingredients
of an offence of murder be proved before a
defendant could be convicted of infanticide
contrary to s.1(1) of the 1938 Act. /Art 1
Infanticide Act (NI) 1939 - "notwithstanding that the circumstances were such
that but for this Act the offence would have
amounted to murder", - Notwithstanding means despite, not provided
- Gore (2007)
31Corporate Manslaughter
- Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act
2007 - Too late!
- Too little symbolic but will it work?
- Senior managers ill defined
- Duty concept unnecessary exclusions too wide
- Too complex
- Duty, civil law, exclusions
32Offences Against the Person
- Meachen
- D who causes abh/gbh will not be guilty if
- He has genuine belief that V consented to assault
- D intends no harm greater than assault
- D not reckless as to greater harm than assault
- What level of harm was caused
- what level of harm was intended/foreseen
- does V consent in fact to the level intended
foreseen? - Is consent to that level of harm in that activity
valid?
33Kidnap
- Hendy Freegard
- D who takes and carries V away by fraud not
guilty of kidnap unless - D also deprived V of her liberty
- Ds fraud sufficient to vitiate consent?
34Art 10 Sexual Offences (NI) Order 2008
- Consent
- Bree
- Where V is intoxicated and sexual activity occurs
the question is whether V retained capacity to
choose - H
- It was for the jury, not the judge, to decide,
on the basis of the evidence called, whether,
the complainant had the capacity to consent
and/or in fact consented to intercourse or not.
35Frauds and consent to sex
- Jheeta
- Deception as to the reason for the act is not
sufficient to trigger s 76 - Nature?
- Purpose?
- What does purpose mean in cases of sexual
conduct? - Should parliament have distinguished penile
penetration cases from others?
36Deception as to purpose
- Piper (2007)
- V thought she was modelling D thought otherwise
- Devonald (2008)
- D causes 16 year old to engage in sex on a
webcam. V thinks D is a 20 year old busty blonde
D is a 31 year old vengeful father.
37Obscenity
- Hamilton
- Outraging public decency can be committed even if
no one saw what D was doing. - Provided there were indeed others present, and
Ds conduct was capable of being seen by them.
38Indecent child images
- Protection of Children (NI) Order 1978
- Harrison
- H possessed images if
- he knew that any images he accessed would be
copied made in terms of legislative language
and stored automatically - and
- knew the likelihood that in accessing certain
sites, illegal material would in this way be
accessed (ie pop up).
39Dishonesty offences
- Theft and dishonesty rare example of a case in
which no reasonable tribunal could conclude not
dishonest Gohill v DPP - Robbery does not require proof that V was
actually put in fear. Otherwise the commission of
the offence would turn on the courage of V. - But is it necessary for V to apprehend that force
will be used? - Where the allegation is that D put any person in
fear of being then and there subjected to force,
in that form of the offence, it would seem to be
a necessary element.
40Money Laundering or handling
- Rose
- D acquired a childs motor bike
- D claims not criminal property since he does not
have an interest in it if stolen - CA- thief acquires a limited interest in the
property - Can be liable under s 329 for possession of
criminal property.
41Fraud Act 2 glitches
- Section 11 does not work in cases where D makes
unauthorised use of a credit card to obtain
services. - There must be a failure to pay
- No transitional jurisdictional provisions seem to
have been included. - If D commits a deception offence abroad before
1st Jan 2007 1993 Act seems not now to apply
42Fraud Act 2 glitches
- Section 11 does not work in cases where D makes
unauthorised use of a credit card to obtain
services. - There must be a failure to pay
- No transitional jurisdictional provisions seem to
have been included. - If D commits a deception offence abroad before
1st Jan 2007 1993 Act seems not now to apply
43Public Order
- Police cell is not a home R v Francis
- Racially aggravated offences are
- (i) desirable to reflect the qualitatively
distinct harm - (ii) capable of commission by use of the words
bloody foreigners R v Rogers - Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 creates
offences akin to inciting racial hatred
44Blasphemy
- The offence will be established only if what is
done or said is such as to induce a reasonable
reaction involving civil strife, damage to the
fabric of society or their equivalent.
45Weapons
- Deyemi Firearms Act
- Rejected defence argument that D should be
allowed to prove that he was not aware of the
nature of the article he possessed. - Weaver
- Prohibited weapon is necessarily a firearm though
not necessarily a lethal barrelled weapon
46Weapons
- Salih
- Possession for self defence
- if D was acting in self-defence at the moment
when he was alleged to be in possession of a
firearm, then not guilty. - But if the possession with intent to endanger
life was alleged to have occurred at some time
before that moment and at a time when he or she
was not in immediate fear of attack, then, the
defence was not available.
47Terrorism
- New Protocol
- Section 1 of the Terrorism Act 2000 offences
involving threat of action designed to influence
a government of a country other than the United
Kingdom (s.1(4)) - Includes dictatorships such as Libya
48Terrorism
- Section 57 - Zafar
- S 57 to be read restrictively
- Applies only where
- D possess an article
- Which gives rise to reasonable suspicion
- That he intends it to be used
- for the purpose of commission/preparation etc of
act of trerrorism.
49Road Safety Act 2006
- A person is to be regarded as driving without due
care and attention if (and only if) the way he
drives falls below what would be expected of a
competent and careful driver. - regard shall be had not only to the circumstances
of which he could be expected to be aware but
also to any circumstances shown to have been
within the knowledge of the accused.
50Road Safety Act 2006
- S 20 - causing death by careless or
inconsiderate driving (5 yr max). - 21(1) creates offences of causing death by
driving when - unlicensed,
- disqualified
- uninsured
- (2 yrs max)
51Computer Misuse
- Denial of service attacks may be prosecuted under
CMA 1990 DPP v Lennon - Computer Misuse Act extended by Police and
Justice Act 2006 - Unauthorised act with intent/recklessness as to
impairing operation of computer - Making or supplying articles for use in computer
misuse offence