Criminal Law - General Matters Flashcards
Magistrates’ Court
Where all criminal cases will begin
The more serious cases will be transferred to the Crown Court
Goals of Criminal Law
- Punishment
- Incapacitation
- Deterrence
- Rehabilitation
Burden of proof
- Lies with the prosecution - defendant never has to prove their innocence
- A defendant has the burden of proof with regards to certain defences
Presumption of Innocence
- Innocent until proven guilty
- A finding of not guilty does not equal innocent
Evidential Burden
- Applies to certain defences such as self-defence
- If defence raised self-defence (evidential burden) the prosecution has the burden of providing evidence to disprove this (legal burden)
Standard of Proof
- Prosecution must prove each and every element of a crime beyond reasonable doubt
- Where the burden of proof is on the defendant (e.g. pleading the defence of insanity) they must prove this on the balance of probabilities
Actus Reus
Physical element of the crime
Mens Rea
Mental element of the offence
Concurrence
Actus reus and mens rea exist at the same time
Strict liability offences
No mens rea requirement
Offence committed if actus reus is complete
Exception that negates the offence
E.g. reasonable excuse
Defendant must prove on the balance of probabilities that they fall within that exception
Defences
Considered after the prosecution have prved that the actus reus and mens rea are fulfilled
Defendant may argue that a defence is available to them
Defences can be complete (acquittal) or partial (conviction of lesser offence)