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Criminal Law Lecture - Year One, Term 1: Murder Recap

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Criminal Law Lecture - Year One, Term 1: Murder Recap

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Uploaded on
April 13, 2021
Number of pages
4
Written in
2019/2020
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Dr sanjeeb hoissan, professor alan norrie and dr laura lammasniemi
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All classes

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31st October 2019

Criminal Law – Lecture 7: Murder

1. Brief recap of mens rea: intention, recklessness and negligence
- Standards of mens rea: intention, recklessness and negligence (as well as gross
negligence)
o Intention
o Direct intention
 When the proscribed conduct or consequence is the defendant’s
direct aim or purpose
o Oblique intention
 1) It was virtually certain to arise (objective part)
 2) D recognises that it was virtually certain consequence of D’s
conduct (subjective part)
 3) Jury find that this recognition amounts to intention (jury part)
2. Understanding murder within the bigger picture of crime
3. Scope of homicide
4. Murder: actus reus and mens rea

Recklessness:
- D must demonstrate that s/he:
o Foresaw a risk of the relevant elements of the actus reus (subjective part)
o And, unreasonably continued to run that risk (objective part)
Negligence:
- Doesn’t properly require a state of mind
o Rather, it requires the judgement that the defendant’s conduct fell below a
specific ‘reasonable’ standard of care
o The primary example of objective mens rea

Subjective elements of mens rea:
- D intended to cause the harm
- D foresaw the risk of the harm occurring
- D realised that there was a risk of harm

Objective:
- The risk of harm was foreseeable (to a reasonable person in D’s position)
- D’s actions were unreasonable
- D should have foreseen/ought to have appreciated that there was a risk of harm

Murder:
- Police recorded 1.4 million violence against the person offences in the year ending
March 2018
- “violence without injury” accounted for 42%
- “violence with injury” accounted for 37%
- “Homicide” accounted for 0.05% (726 offences)
- However, homicide rates are at a record high
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