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Lecture notes

Defences week 16 part 2

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  • March 8, 2023
  • 3
  • 2022/2023
  • Lecture notes
  • Crim law
  • Defences week 16
All documents for this subject (13)
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charlie-annmarron
Criminal law – live webinar - introduction to defences and denials of offending

Fundamental concepts

- Theft – can often be confusing
- Asking the right questions

Who can be liable and why?

Default rule = everyone can be liable

- However, there are rules and exceptions – for example a 5-year-old cannot be liable or
someone seriously mentally disturbed cannot be liable etc.

When can there be no liability? = denial of offences / defences

Infancy (age) – subjects of criminal law

Insanity – denials of offences or defence

Automatism – denial of offence

Diminished responsibility – partial defence to murder

Loss of control – partial defence to murder

Intoxication – denial of offence

The unfitness to plead – procedure

Unfitness to plead

- Can the defendant understand the charges?
- Can they understand the course of trial or give evidence?
- If unfit – trial of the facts – section 4 and 4A of the Criminal Procedure (Insanity) Act 1964
- If AR committed – hospital order, supervision order or an absolute discharge
- Seemed to be unfair and a problematic system

Denial of offence

- When D claims that one or more elements of the offence are absent
- Technically, these are not defences but simply a negation of a particular offence
requirement
- Often linked to issues of capacity
- For denial of offences look at context of AR and MR and the denials at hand rather than
liability

Defences

- A defence is raised where an offence has been committed i.e., all elements of the offence
are present
- You need to discuss and conclude in relation to D’s liability for an offence or an attempted
offence first, then discuss any potential defences
- A general defence tend to be duress, necessity, self-defence
- Partial defences (to murder only) are loss of control and diminished responsibility
- Insanity? Automatism? Intoxication?

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