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Summary A-Level OCR Law - Paper One Section B (Criminal Law)

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A comprehensive A-Level Law revision guide, specifically for OCR Paper 1 Section B. It’s structured like detailed exam notes — summarising definitions, elements, key cases, and evaluations for every major criminal law topic likely to appear in 20-mark questions. Here’s a breakdown of what it covers: ️ Main Topics It systematically explains the actus reus, mens rea, defences, and evaluations for all core areas of criminal law: Fatal Offences Murder – actus reus (killing, causation, etc.) and mens rea (malice aforethought, intent types). Voluntary Manslaughter Loss of Control (under s54–55 Coroners & Justice Act 2009) Diminished Responsibility (under s2 Homicide Act 1957 as amended) Involuntary Manslaughter Gross Negligence Manslaughter (Broughton test) Unlawful Act Manslaughter (Church test) Non-Fatal Offences Assault and Battery (common law definitions) ABH (s47 OAPA 1861) GBH (s20/s18 OAPA 1861) Wounding Includes evaluation of NFO laws (criticism of OAPA, Law Commission reforms, etc.) Property Offences Theft (s1–6 Theft Act 1968) Robbery (s8 Theft Act 1968) Burglary (s9 Theft Act 1968) General Defences Insanity Automatism Intoxication (+ evaluation) Self-Defence (+ evaluation) Consent (+ evaluation) Duress & Necessity Inchoate Offences Attempts (Criminal Attempts Act 1981) Features Each topic has: Definition (statutory or common law) Key elements (actus reus + mens rea) Supporting case law (with full citations) Structure and sequence that mirror AQA/OCR mark scheme logic Evaluation sections critique the clarity, fairness, and reform proposals (Law Commission, case inconsistencies, etc.) Written concisely — ideal for essay planning or memorisation.

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Subido en
10 de noviembre de 2025
Número de páginas
32
Escrito en
2025/2026
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PAPER 1 SECTION B
MURDER (20 MARKS):

-​ Common law - unlawful killing with malice aforethought

-​ Actus Reus - Unlawfully killing a reasonable creature in being
under the King’s peace

1.​ KILLING:

-​ The killing can take place via an ACT or an Omission

-​ Duties to act:
1.​ Contract - R v Pittwood
2.​ Public Office - R v Dytham
3.​ Relationship - Gibbins + Proctor
4.​ Voluntary assuming responsibility - Stone + Dobinson
5.​ Creating a dangerous situation - R v Miller

2.​ UNLAWFUL:

-​ Unlawful means unnecessary - e.g. self-defence (Martin)

3.​ V was a REASONABLE CREATURE:

-​ Life begins at birth (AGs ref 3 of 1994)

-​ We stop being a reasonable creature at death of brain stem
(Malcherek)

-​ If the brain stem is active, but not in a recoverable state -
court permission is required to withdraw care (Airedale NHS v
Bland)

4.​ Took place during KING’S PEACE:

,-​ Victim may not be protected by the King’s peace if we are at
war declared by the Prime Minister (Clegg)

-​ The victim is protected by the King’s Peace, not the defendant
and his actions (Adebolajo)

5.​ Act/Omission CAUSED death:

-​ Factual Causation proven using the ‘but for’ test (Pagett)

-​ Legal Causation proven using the ‘operative and substantial’
test (Smith)

-​ The chain of causation can be broken be unreasonable and
unforeseeable act of:
- ​Third parties (Pagett)
- Medical Practitioners if the treatment is palpably
wrong (Jordan)
- The victim (Williams)
- Hidden vulnerabilities of the victim will not break the chain of
causation (Blaue)

6.​ MENS REA - malice aforethought:

-​ Express malice - D intends to kill
-​ Implied malice - D intends to cause GBH (Vickers)

-​ Intent can be proven through:
1.​ Direct intent - D aims to bring about the consequence
(Mohan)
2.​ Oblique intent - Mathews and Alleyne says the jury may
find oblique intention using the Woolin test: D realises
the consequence was virtually certain resulting from his
actions

,VOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER - LOSS OF SELF CONTROL (20
MARKS):

DEFINITION:

-​ Loss of control is defined under s54 of the Coroners and
Justice Act 2009

-​ Partial defence to murder giving judge discretion of
sentencing

1.​ D experiences a LOSS OF SELF CONTROL:

-​ s54(1)(a) - D must experience a loss of control

-​ D must lose their power to act in accordance with considered
judgement or loss of normal powers of reasoning (Jewell)

-​ s54(2) Loss of self control need not be sudden

-​ s54(4) The defence cannot be used if D acted with considered
desire for revenge

2.​ Caused by a QUALIFYING TRIGGER:

-​ s54(1)(b) Loss of control must come from a qualifying trigger

-​ s55(3) FEAR - Loss of self control arises from D fearing
serious violence (Ellis)

-​ S55(4) - ANGER (Zebedee)
1.​ Things said/done
2.​ Which are of extremely grave character
3.​ Giving D a justifiable sense of being seriously wronged

-​ s55(6) Excluding the triggers
-​ s55(6)(a) - excluding fear trigger if D’s fear comes from attack
that D incited

, -​ s55(6)(b) - excluding anger trigger if things said/done incited
by D
-​ s55(6)(c) - excluding anger trigger if things said/done
constituted sexual infidelity. Clinton shows it may be
considered if there are other triggers that can't be understood
without knowing of the infidelity.


3.​ Which EXPLAINS why D killed V:

-​ s54(1)(c) The loss of self control explains D's act of killing if a
person:
1.​ Of D’s sex + age
2.​ A normal degree of tolerance + self-restraint
3.​ In the same circumstances of D
-​ Would react in the same/similar way
-​ s54(3) - “same circumstances ignores
circumstances that bear on D’s tolerance and
self-restraint”

-​ Ignore D’s intoxication (Asmelash)

VOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER - DIMINISHED RESPONSIBILITY (20
MARKS):

DEFINITION:

-​ D may be able to raise the partial defence of diminished
responsibility defined in s2 of the Homicide Act (amended by
the Coroners & Justice Act 2009)

1.​ ABNORMALITY of MENTAL FUNCTIONING:

-​ A state of mind so different from that of an ordinary human
that a reasonable person would term it abnormal (Byrne)

2.​ Arising from a RECOGNISED MEDICAL CONDITION:
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