ACCESSORY AFTER THE FACT Flashcards

1
Q

Section and Penalty

A

S71(1) CA61 Penalty (S312)
Under 10 years = Half penalty
10 years or more = 5 years
Life imprisonment = 7 years

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2
Q

Elements

A

1) Knowing any person to be a party to an offence
2) Receives, comforts or assists that person
OR Tampers with or actively suppresses any evidence against him or her
3) In order to help him or her to escape after arrest
OR to avoid arrest or conviction.

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3
Q

Knowledge Definition

A

Knowing, or correctly believing, the defendant may believe something wrongly but cannot know something that is false.

R v Crooks

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4
Q

R v Crooks

A

R v Crooks - Knowledge
Knowledge means actual knowledge or belief in the sense of having no real doubt that the person assisted was a party to the relevant offence. Mere suspicion of their involvement in the offence is insufficient.

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5
Q

R v Briggs

A

R v Briggs - Wilful Blindness
As with a receiving charge under s246(1), knowledge may also be inferred from wilful blindness or a deliberate abstention from making inquiries that would confirm the suspected truth.

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6
Q

What knowledge must an accessory possess Of note only

A

At the time of the assistance given, must have knowledge that: • an offence has been committed, and • the person they are assisting was a party (principal or secondary) to that offence.

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7
Q

Person

A

Gender neutral. Proven by judicial notice or circumstantial evidence.

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8
Q

Spouse/civil union partner exceptions Legislation Of note only

A

S71(2) CA61 You cannot be charged with being an accessory after the fact to your spouse (legally married), or your spouse and another party (this when they work in concert). This same limitation applies to those in a civil union, but does not extend to encompass those in de facto relationships or other family relationships. This defence does not extend to cases where the person helps another party but does not assist their spouse or civil union partner as well.

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9
Q

Party Legislation

A

S66(1) CA61 (1)Everyone is party to and guilty of an offence who: a) Actually commits the offence; OR b) Does or omits an act for the purpose of aiding any person to commit the offence; OR c) Abets any person in the commission of the offence; OR d) Incites, counsels or procures any person to commit the offence.

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10
Q

Definition of Offence/Crime

A

S2 CA61 Any act or omission that is punishable on conviction under any enactment, and are demarcated into four categories within s6, Criminal Procedures Act 2011.

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11
Q

R v Mane

A

R v Mane

To be considered an accessory the acts done by the person must be after the completion of the offence.

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12
Q

Receives, Comforts or Assists Examples

A

Receives - Harbouring an offender or offering them shelter eg hiding a prison escapee in a basement.
Comforts - an accessory provides an offender with things such as food and clothing.
Assists - Providing transport, acting as a look out, identifying someone willing to purchase stolen property as a receiver and deliberately providing authorities with false information as to an offender’s whereabouts. Giving advice, information, material or services to the offender is also captured.

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13
Q

Tampers with or actively suppresses evidence Definition and Example

A

Tampers means to alter the evidence against the offender. Example: Modifying an offender’s telephone records to conceal communications that might implicate them.
Actively suppressing evidence encompasses acts of concealing or destroying evidence against an offender. Example: Bloodied clothing is washed repeatedly to remove evidence or it is set alight to destroy the clothing.

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14
Q

Prosecution Proof of principal offence Of note only

A

An accessory after the fact is entitled to insist on proof that the alleged offence was committed and to challenge that proof. This rule also applies to situations where the offender has pleaded guilty to the principal offence. Despite such a plea and/or a conviction having been entered, the principal offence committed must still be proved where required.

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15
Q

Prosecution Acquittal of offender Of note only

A

A person can still be convicted as an accessory after the fact despite the offender having been, or where they may be, acquitted of the offence, unless the accessory’s conviction is inconsistent with the acquittal of the original offender.

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16
Q

Two examples of wilfull blindness

A

A person is considered willfully blind in only two situations, these being:
• where the person deliberately shuts their eyes and fails to inquire; this is because they knew what the answer would be, or
• in situations where the means of knowledge are easily at hand and the person realises the likely truth of the matter but refrains from inquiring in order not to know.