accessory after the fact Flashcards
what needs to be proved in an accessory after the fact charge
- the person (person A) who is received, comforted or assisted by the accessory (person B) is a principal or secondary party to an offence
- at the time of receiving, comforting or assisting that person (person A) the accessory (person B) knows that person A was a party to the offence
- that the accessory (person B) received, comforted or assisted person A or tampered with or actively suppressed any evidence against that person
- that at the time of receiving, comforting or assisting etc the accessory’s (person B) purpose was to enable that person (person A) to escape after arrest or to avoid arrest or conviction
s71 of the crimes act 1961
1) an accessory after the fact to an offence is one who, knowing any person to have been a party to the offence, receives, comforts or assists that person or tampers with or actively suppresses any evidence against him, in order to enable him to escape after arrest or to avoid arrest or conviction
what is the penalty for an accessory after the fact to an imprisonable offence
liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 7 years for offences that carry a maximum sentence of life imprisonment and 5 years for offences that cary a maximum sentence of 10 years
offence
any act or omission that is punishable upon conviction under any enactment and are demarcated into 4 categories within s6 of the criminal procedures act 2011
knowing
simester and brookbanks
“knowing means knowing or correctly believing” - the belief must be a correct one, a person cannot know something if their belief is wrong
what knowledge must an accessory possess at the time of the assistance
- that an offence has been committed, and
- the person they are assisting was a principal or secondary party to that offence
a person is not liable as an accessory where this knowledge comes about after the assistance
what two situations would a person be considered wilfully blind
- where they deliberately shut their eyes and fail to inquire 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 to know
what intentional acts fulfil the actus reus for an accessory after the fact
the accessory must do one of these 5 deliberate acts:
- receives
- comforts
- assists
- tampers with evidence
- actively suppresses evidence
receiving or comforting
receives has a common law meaning and refers to harbouring an offender or offering them shelter can be considered receiving and/or comforting eg hiding a prison escapee in a basement
comforts has a common law meaning and refers to providing shelter, accommodation, food, clothing or other supplies to an offender
assists
assists has a common law meaning and refers to
- providing transport
- acting as a look out
- identifying a purchaser for stolen property as a receiver
- deliberately providing authorities with false information as to an offenders whereabouts
- giving advice, information, material or services to the offender
tampers with evidence
tamper means to alter evidence against the offender
eg. modifying an offenders telephone record to conceal communications that might implicate them
actively suppresses
actively suppressing evidence encompasses acts of concealing or destroying evidence against an offender
eg. washing bloodied clothing repeatedly to remove evidence or setting it alight to destroy it
attempting to be an accessory after the fact
r v DH
the appellant was charged and convicted with attempting to be an accessory after the fact to murder by assisting others in the unsuccessful attempt to dispose of a weapon used in a fatal robbery
what is an example of indirect assistance
there is no requirement that the offender (person A) is directly assisted by the accessory (person B)
eg. person A commits offence and assisted directly by person C. person B assists person C directly but does not directly assist person A. despite this distance, person B is still an accessory after the fact to person A
what is the intent required to be an accessory
the accessory must intend to enable the offender to:
- escape after arrest
- avoid arrest
- avoid conviction
mere knowledge that an act is likely to assist an offender is insufficient