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Criminal Law Cases AQA A Level Law Study Guide Rated A £10.20   Add to cart

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Criminal Law Cases AQA A Level Law Study Guide Rated A

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Criminal Law Cases AQA A Level Law Study Guide Rated A+ Smith v Chief Constable of Woking (1983) R v Lamb (1967) R v Ireland (1997) R v Constanza (1997) R v Cunningham (1957) Collins v Wilcock (1984) Faulkner v Talbot (1981) DPP v K (1990) Haystead v DPP (2000) R v Miller (1954) R v Robe...

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  • March 3, 2024
  • 17
  • 2023/2024
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Criminal Law Cases AQA A Level Law Study
Guide Rated A+

1). Smith v chief constable of woking (1983)

 Ans: immediate can mean imminent


2). R v lamb (1967)

 Ans: no assault if no apprehension


3). R v ireland (1997)

 Ans: silence can amount to assault


4). R v constanza (1997)

 Ans: written words can amount to assault


5). R v cunningham (1957)

 Ans: defines recklessness as whether the defendant could have foreseen that some
harm could result


6). Collins v wilcock (1984)

 Ans: Contact is unlawful if the physical contact was "beyond generally acceptable
standards of conduct"


7). Faulkner v talbot (1981)

 Ans: Any touching will suffice for battery


8). Dpp v k (1990)

 Ans: Battery can be committed by an indirect act




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, 9). Haystead v dpp (2000)

 Ans: Battery can be transferred to victims without touching them.


10). R v miller (1954)

 Ans: defined ABH as 'any hurt or injury calculated to interfere the health or comfort of
the victim'


11). R v roberts (1971)

 Ans: No break in the chain of causation if the victim's actions were reasonably
foreseeable


12). R v chan fook (1994)

 Ans: psychiatric injury has to be clinically proven, emotions are not ABH


13). R v savage (1991)

 Ans: intent to cause some harm is sufficient as the mens rea for ABH or GBH


14). Dpp v smith (2006)

 Ans: if enough hair is cut out it can amount to ABH or GBH


15). R v mohan (1976)

 Ans: defined intention as: a decision to bring about, in so far as it lies within the
accused's power, the prohibited consequence.


16). R v thomas (1985)

 Ans: Touching clothes counts as battery.


17). Read v coker (1853)

 Ans: Gestures or threats of violence can be an assault


18). R v adomako (1994)



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,  Ans: Developed into test in R v Broughton (2020)


19). R v bowyer (2013)

 Ans: Cannot have a feeling of being justifiably wronged if you are committing a
criminal act


20). Hill v baxter (1958)

 Ans: Burden of proof for automatism is on the defence


21). R v dietschmann (2003)

 Ans: Lord Hutton: did that abnormality impair his mental responsibility for his acts in
doing the killing?


22). R v oye (2013)

 Ans: An insane person cannot set the standards as to reasonableness of force


23). A-g ref no 2 of 1992

 Ans: Must be a total loss of control, showing some control negates automatism as a
defence


24). R v coley, mcghee and harris (2013)

 Ans: If you are in an involuntary state due to voluntary actions, you cannot rely on
automatism as a defence


25). R v bird (1985)

 Ans: Evidence of a retreat by the D is useful but not essential


26). R v kemp (1957)

 Ans: Disease of the mind can apply to physical conditions


27). R v burgess (1991)



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