Rules of Criminal Law Flashcards
1
Q
Define a crime.
A
- Conduct that is forbidden by the state, for which there is penal consequences- supported by Lord Atkin
2
Q
Explain why what is considered Criminal will change over time, and give an example.
A
- Change over time, through changing views in society and technology
Example- Changing views on what is criminal shown with changes in law on consenting homosexual acts:
- 1885, Criminal Law Amendment Act made consenting homosexual acts criminal, even in priv
- 1967 de-criminalised for those 21 and over
- 1994 age reduced to 19
- 2000, age reduced to 16, in line with heterosexual Legislation
3
Q
Define Actus Reus and explain what it is.
A
- Guilty act
- Conduct must be voluntary
- Doesn’t cover just an act, also covers an omission (failure to act) or state affairs
4
Q
Define Mens Rea and explain what it is.
A
- Guilty mind
- Various levels of guilty mind required from diff offences from high to low, intention to recklessness
5
Q
Why are both Actus Reus and Mens Rea required?
A
- To establish guilt
- Even if both are established, defendant may not be guilty if there is a proven defence in law
6
Q
State the rules governing the Standard of Proof.
A
- Standard of proof in crim cases is ‘beyond all reasonable doubt’
- Judge will explain this to Jury, shouldn’t convict unless they reach this level
- Jury must be sure of Defendant’s guilt
- Higher Standard of Proof than in Civil Cases- due to Defendant possibly losing their liability
- All defendant’s innocent until proven guilty
- Down to Prosecution to establish both Actus Reus and Mens Rea have been reached