Abduction Flashcards
Abduction
Section and Penalty
Section 208 1 (a) or (b) or (c) Crimes Act 1961
14 years imprisonment
Abduction Ingredients
Section 208 (a) or (b) or (c) Crimes Act 1961
14 years imprisonment
- Unlawfully
- Takes away OR detains
- A person
- Without his or her consent OR with his or her consent obtained by fraud or duress
(a) with intent to go through a form of marriage or civil union with P; or
(b) with intent to have sexual connection with P; or
(c) with intent to cause P to go through a form of marriage or civil union,
or to have sexual connection, with some other person.
Define Unlawfully
Without lawful justification, authority or excuse
R V CROSSAN
(Taking away and detaining are seperate and distinct offences. The first consists of taking the victim away. The second of detaining them.)
The first offence was
complete when the prisoner took the woman away against her will. Then, having
taken her away, he detained her against her will, and his conduct in detaining her
constituted a new and different offence.”
R V WELLARD
kidnap
The essence of the offence of kidnapping is the deprivation of liberty coupled with carrying away from the place where the victim wants to be.
R V PRYCE
Detaining is an active concept meaning to keep in confinement or custody. This is to be contrasted to the passive concept of harbouring or mere failure to hand over.
Define Person
Gender neutral proven by judicial notice or circumstantial evidence.
Define Consent
Consent is a persons conscious and voluntary agreement to do something desired or proposed by another.
R V COX
Consent must be full, voluntary, free and informed, freely and voluntarily given by a person in a position to form a rational judgement.
Consent by fraud
Consent obtained by the misrepresentation of the facts of the offenders intentions.
Consent by duress
Actual or implied threats of force to the victim or another person. Can include other forms of pressure or coercion.
Child under 16 - Consent
Section 209A Crimes Act 1961
For the purpose of S208 and S209,a person under the age of 16 years cannot consent to being taken away or detained.
Define Intent
In a criminal law contest there are two specific types of intent. First, there must be an intent to commit the act itself and second, an intention to get a specific result.
R V MOHI
The offence is complete once there has been a period of detention or taking accompanied by the necessary intent, regardless of whether that intent was carried out.
R V WAAKA
Intent T-A
Intent my be formed at any time during the taking away. If a taking away commences without the intent to have intercourse, but that intent is formed during the taking away, then that is sufficient for the purpose of the section.