Forms and aspects of Mens Rea Flashcards
1
Q
What is direct intent?
A
- The actor desires to bring about a certain result
- Does not require for the offender to be aware of the certainty of the result, as long as the completion of the offence is the purpose
2
Q
What is indirect intent?
A
- The actor knows his conduct will almost certainly bring about the consequences that he does not desire or primarily aim at
- The result is intended is if it is not desired
- Use the test of failure (if the result would not have happened, would the actor be disappointed?)
3
Q
What is conditional intent?
A
- The actor is aware of the possible side-effects of his actions but decides to act nonetheless, thereby accepting these side-effects
- Cognitive element - Awareness of a risk:
- GR - Any possible chance
- NL - Risk must be considerable - Volitional element - Acceptance of the risk
4
Q
What about HIV cases?
A
- NL - You need a special risk-increasing circumstance - The court is reluctant to impose criminal liability
- GR - Dolus eventualis is accepted for criminal liability
- EN - Recklessness is accepted, even if the defendant is not aware that he is HIV positive because he is shutting his eyes to the obvious
5
Q
What is recklessness?
A
- Middle ground between direct intent and negligence
- Caldwell recklessness - Switch to an objective test - Not only awareness of the risk, but also the failure to foresee an obvious risk
- R v G - Replaced Caldwell - The reckless actor must be aware of the risk he has taken
- The risk must be unreasonable - Assessed by objective factors:
- Likelihood of the occurrence
- Social utility of the act
- Nature and extent of the harm
6
Q
What is negligence?
A
- Violation of a duty of care that causes a result prohibited by criminal law
- Conscious negligence - The actor foresees the possibility of a consequence resulting from his conduct but wrongfully believes that it will not occur
- Unconscious negligence - The actor wrongfully does not consider the consequences of his conduct - Always compared to a reasonable person, taking into account the characteristics of the offender - Requires gross negligence