Blackmail Flashcards
Elements of blackmail
Section 237(1)
Threatens, expressly or by implication, to make any accusation against any person (living or dead), to disclose something about any person (living or dead), or to cause serious damage to property or endanger the safety of any person
With intent
To cause the person to whom the threat is made to act in accordance with the will of the person making the threat and
To obtain any benefit or to cause loss to any other person
Threatens
- Requires little more than to make clear an intention.
- The threat does not need to be overt but may be subtle and indirect.
- Includes where the suspect makes the threat themselves and where the suspect knowingly and intentionally passes the threat made by another on, with the intention of assisting the threat maker in achieving their purpose.
- It is not necessary that the person conveying the threat holds themselves out as the person who might execute the threat.
- It is not necessary that the person threatened by the offender be the same person against whom the accusation or disclosure is to be made, or whose property is to be damaged or safety endangered.
- The threat does not need to be received directly by the intended victim, provided it is conveyed to that victim.
Accusation
- Will normally refer to an allegation.
- It is immaterial whether the substance of the accusation is true.
- The accusation does not need to relate to the person from whom the demand is made.
Disclosure
Revelation of information which would cause serious embarrassment or emotional distress.
The disclosure does not need to relate to the person from who the demand is made.
Obtain
To obtain or retain for himself or herself or for any other person.
Benefit
Includes a privilege, service or benefit that has no ascertainable monetary value.
Pecuniary advantage
Economic advantage or a financial gain or benefit, an enhancement of a person’s financial position.
Privilege
Means a special right or advantage and need not be a financial one.
Valuable consideration
Money or money’s worth.
Statutory defence
It is a defence to a charge of blackmail if the defendant showed they believed they were entitled to obtain a benefit or to cause the loss and objectively viewed the making of the threat was a reasonable and proper means for obtaining the benefit or causing the loss.
Belief by the person making the threat is in itself not a defence unless the threat is in the circumstances reasonable and proper means for effecting their purpose.
Elements of demanding with intent to steal (1)
Section 239(1)
Without claim of right
By force or with any threat
Compels any person to execute, make, accept, endorse, alter or destroy
Any document capable of conferring a pecuniary advantage
With intent to obtain any benefit
Elements of demand with intent to steal (2)
Section 239(2)
With menaces or by any threat
Demands any property from any persons
With intent to steal it
Execute
To do what the law requires to give validity to the document.
Document capable of conferring a pecuniary advantage
Document is a thing which provides evidence or information or serves as a record.
A document is capable if it could do so in certain circumstances even if those conditions are not likely to occur.
Demand
Clear request made firmly.