Serious Assaults Flashcards
Wounding with Intent to Cause GBH
Crimes Act 1961 Sec.188(1) 14 Years Imprisonment
With Intent to Cause Grevious Bodily Harm (R v Taisalika, DPP v Smith and R Collister)
To any person
Wounds (R v Waters)
OR
Maims
OR
Disfigures (R v Rapana and Murray)
OR
Causes GBH (DPP v Smith)
To any person
R v Taisalika
DPP v Smith
R v Collister
Intent (definition)
The nature of the blow and the gash which it produced on the complainant’s head would point strongly to the presence of the necessary intent.
(R v Taisalika)
“Bodily harm” needs no explanation and “grevious” means no
more and no less than “really serious.”
(DPP v Smith)
Circumstantial evidence from which an offenders intent may be inferred can include:
The offenders actions and words before, during and after the event.
The surrounding circumstances.
The nature of the act itself.
R v Collister
There must be an intention:
To commit the act, and
to get a specific result.
R v Waters
“A breaking of the skin would be commonly regarded as a characteristic of a wound. The breaking of the skin will be normally evidenced by a flow of blood and, in its occurrence at the site of a blow or impact, the wound will more often than not be external. But there are those cases where the bleeding which evidences the separation of tissues may be internal.”
(R v Waters)
Maims (defined)
Will involve mutilating, crippling or disabling part of the body so the victim is deprived of the use of a limb or one of the senses. Needs to be some degree of permanence.
Disfigures (defined)
R v Rapana and Murray
To “disfigure” means “to deform or deface; to mar or alter the figure or appearance of a person.”
The word ‘disfigure’ covers “not only permanent damage but also temporary damage.”
(R v Rapana and Murray)
Grievous bodily harm (defined)
DPP v Smith
Grevious bodily harm can be defined simply as “harm that is really serious.”
“Bodily harm” needs no explanation and “grevious” means no and no less than “really serious.”
(DPP v Smith)
Any person …defined
Gender neutral. Proved by judicial notice or circumstantially.
Wounding with Intent (Injures)
Crimes Act 1961 Sec.188(2) 7 Years Imprisonment
With Intent to Injure Any person (R v Taisalika, R v Collister and R v Donovan)
OR
With Reckless Disregard for the Safety of Others (Cameron v R and R v Tipple)
Wounds (R v Waters)
OR
Maims
OR
Disfigures (R v Rapana and Murray)
OR
Causes GBH (DPP v Smith)
To any person
Cameron v R
R v Tipple
Recklessness (definition)
Recklessness is established if:
(a) the defendant recognised that there was a real possibility that:
(i) his or her actions would bring about the proscribed result; and/or
(ii) that the proscribed circumstances existed; and
(b) having regard to that risk those actions were unreasonable
(Cameron v R)
Recklessness requires that the offender know of, or have a conscious appreciation of the relevant risk, and it may be said that it requires “a deliberate decision to run the risk”.
(R v Tipple)
Recklessness is the conscious and deliberate taking of an unjustified risk.
Injuring with Intent-GBH
Crimes Act 1961 Section 189(1) 10 years Imprisonment
With Intent to cause Grevious Bodily Harm (R v Taisalika and DPP v Smith)
To any person
Injures (R v Donovan)
Any person
Injures (defined)
R v Donovan
Injure -Sec.2, Crimes Act 1961
Means to cause actual bodily harm.
‘Bodily harm’ includes any hurt or injury calculated to interfere with the health or comfort of the victim. It need not be permanent, but it must, no doubt, be more than transitory and trifling.
(R v Donovan)
Injuring with Intent-Injures
Crimes Act 1961 Section 189(2) 5 years Imprisonment
With Intent to Injure any person (R v Taisalika) and (R v Donovan)
OR
With Reckless Disregard for the Safety of Others (Cameron v R and R v Tipple)
Injures (R v Donovan
Any person
Aggravated Wounding
Crimes Act 1961 Section 191(1)(a) OR (b) OR (c) 14 years Imprisonment
(a) With Intent to commit or facilitate the commission of any imprisonable offence (R v Taisalika, R v Collister, R v Tihi and R v Sturm)
OR
(b) With Intent to avoid detection of himself or any other person in the commission of an imprisonable offence
OR
(c) With Intent to avoid arrest or facilitate flight of himself or any other person upon the commission or attempted commission of any imprisonable offence (R v Wati)
Wounds (R v Waters)
OR
Maims
OR
Disfigures (R v Rapana and Murray)
OR
Causes GBH to any person (DPP v Smith)
OR
Stupefies (R v Sturm)
OR
Renders unconscious any person
OR
By any violent means renders any person incapable of resistance (R v Crossan)
R v Tihi
R v Wati
In addition to one of the specific intents outlined in paragraphs (a), (b) or (c) “it must be shown the offender meant to cause the specified harm or foresaw that the actions undertaken by him were likely to expose others to the risk of suffering it”
(R v Tihi)
There must be proof of the commission or attempted commission of a crime either by the person committing the assault or by the person whose arrest or flight he intends to avoid or facilitate.
(R v Wati)
R v Sturm (Stupifies)
To “stupify” means to cause an effect on the mind or nervous system of a person, which really seriously interferes with that person’s mental or physical ability to act in any way which might hinder an intended crime.