Syllabus offences Flashcards
Summary only offences
- Assault
- Battery
- Theft of goods valued at £200 or less.
- Simple criminal damage where the value is £5,000 or less is treated as summary only.
- An attempt to commit simple criminal damage £5,000 or less is treated as summary only.
Either-way offences
Triable either way:
- Theft
- Burglary / Aggravated burglary
- Fraud:
- By false representation
- By abuse of position
- By failing to disclose
- s 47 OAPA
- s 20 OAPA
- Simple criminal damage where the value exceeds £5,000
- Simple arson
Indictable only offences
Triable only on indictment:
- Robbery
- s 18 OAPA
- Aggravated burglary
- Aggravated arson
- Aggravated criminal damage
- Murder – where a verdict of voluntary manslaughter can be a possible outcome
- Involuntary manslaughter:
- Unlawful act manslaughter
- Manslaughter by gross negligence
Which theft offence is treated as summary only?
Low value shoplifting - £200 or less
What is the max sentence for low value shoplifting?
6 months
For which offence is the max penalty 3 months’
imprisonment / level 4 fine (magistrates)?
- Criminal damage of over £5000
- Criminal damage by arson
For which offences is the max penalty 3 months’
imprisonment / level 4 fine? (exception to the general 6 month rule)
Simple criminal damage - £5000 or less
Which offences are sent straight to the Crown Court?
- Section 51B (complex fraud); or
- Section 51C (children as witnesses).
These are classed as either-way, but otherwise indictable only (no PBV or allocation procedure).
To be complex fraud, at least two of the following must be present:
- Amount alleged to exceed £500,000
- Significant international dimension
- Requires specialised knowledge of financial, commercial, fiscal or regulatory matters (e.g., markets, banking systems, trusts or tax regimes)
- There are numerous victims
- There is substantial and significant fraud on a **public body*
- Case likely to be of widespread public concern, or the alleged misconduct endangered
the economic well-being of the UK (e.g., undermining confidence in
financial markets)
In which situations are either-way offences sent to the Crown Court?
- Committed for sentence following a guilty plea.
- Committed for sentence after trial in the magistrates’ court.
- Sent for trial where the court has declined jurisdiction following a not guilty plea.
- Sent for trial where the court has accepted jurisdiction following a not guilty plea but the
defendant elects Crown Court trial. - Complex fraud.
- Where children may be called as witnesses when notice has
been given. - Low value shoplifting where D has elected trial in the Crown
Court.