fe1 criminal law night before notes - city · pdf filefe1 criminal law night before notes...

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1 © Brendan Foley, City Colleges www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected] FE1 CRIMINAL LAW NIGHT BEFORE NOTES Classification of a Crime What is a crime o Melling –v- O’Mathgamhna (no comprehensive definition, but various key factors to be considered and applied) o Public Wrongdoing / Requirement of Mens Rea / Criminal Procedure and Vocabulary / Punishment o DPP –v- Boyle , McLoughlin –v- Tuite , Registrar of Companies –v- System Partners Ltd , Goodman –v- Hamilton , Gilligan –v- Criminal Assets Bureau Different potential classifications of criminal offences o Major, minor, summary, indictable, triable-either-way, arrestable (s. 2(1) Criminal Law Act 1997), serious offence (s.1(1) Bail Act 1997). o Distinction of minor offence key as may be tried by courts of summary jurisdiction – Article 38.2. o Distinction mainly on severity of punishment and the moral quality of the accused’s conduct – Melling. Actus Reus Must be a positive act – dichotomy of where something is an act or omission particularly explored in Airedale NHS Trust –v- Bland - but various exceptions where an omission will suffice: o Special Relationship – husband and wife (People (DPP) –v- O’Brien), parent and child (R –v- Gibbons and Proctor – includes where in loco parentis) o Voluntary Assumption of Responsibility R –v- Instan , R –v- Stone and Dobinson o Where person created the risk R –v- Miller o Where fails duty imposed by contract – R –v- Pitwood

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Page 1: FE1 CRIMINAL LAW NIGHT BEFORE NOTES - City · PDF fileFE1 CRIMINAL LAW NIGHT BEFORE NOTES Classification of a Crime ... o s.7(1), Criminal Law Act 1997 –aids, abets, counsels or

1

© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

FE1 CRIMINAL LAW NIGHT BEFORE NOTES

Classification of a Crime

• What is a crime

o Melling –v- O’Mathgamhna (no comprehensive definition, but various key

factors to be considered and applied)

o Public Wrongdoing / Requirement of Mens Rea / Criminal Procedure and

Vocabulary / Punishment

o DPP –v- Boyle , McLoughlin –v- Tuite , Registrar of Companies –v- System

Partners Ltd , Goodman –v- Hamilton , Gilligan –v- Criminal Assets Bureau

• Different potential classifications of criminal offences

o Major, minor, summary, indictable, triable-either-way, arrestable (s. 2(1)

Criminal Law Act 1997), serious offence (s.1(1) Bail Act 1997).

o Distinction of minor offence key as may be tried by courts of summary

jurisdiction – Article 38.2.

o Distinction mainly on severity of punishment and the moral quality of the

accused’s conduct – Melling.

Actus Reus

• Must be a positive act – dichotomy of where something is an act or omission

particularly explored in Airedale NHS Trust –v- Bland - but various exceptions

where an omission will suffice:

o Special Relationship – husband and wife (People (DPP) –v- O’Brien), parent

and child (R –v- Gibbons and Proctor – includes where in loco parentis)

o Voluntary Assumption of Responsibility – R –v- Instan , R –v- Stone and

Dobinson

o Where person created the risk – R –v- Miller

o Where fails duty imposed by contract – R –v- Pitwood

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

• Causation

o The accused’s conduct must have contributed to the end result in some

sufficient way – a minor cause not above a basic level of de minimis will not

suffice – The People (DPP) –v- Davis

o Accordingly, what acts would break the chain of causation from action to

result?

o Medical Treatment – considered broadly across R –v- Jordan , R –v- Smith

and R –v- Cheshire – very much resiled from Jordan. Causation found if injury

still an operating and substantial cause of death and negligence in medical

treatment will only act as a novus actus interveniens if meets Cheshire test of

sufficient potency and independence in its own right;

o Good Samaritan – People (AG) –v- McGrath

o External Influence – Impress Ltd –v- Rees

o Involuntary reactions of third parties – e.g. police returning fire on hostage-

taker (R –v- Pagett)

o Forces of Nature – R –v- Hallett

o Conduct of the Victim – R –v- Kennedy

o Eggshell Skull Rule – must take your victim as you find them, with all their

beliefs, idiosyncrasies and physiological flaws, even an ‘eggshell skull’. See

generally, R-v- Holland , R –v- Blaue (refusal of treatment)

Mens Rea

Must coincide with actus reus – Fagan –v- Metropolitan Police Commissioner ,

Kaitamaki –v- R , R –v- Thabo Meli.

Along with Actus Reus – critical to identify in examining all offences / sections and

demonstrate as present in any problem question.

• Intention

o Can be direct or indirect – age-old issue is difficulty in determining what

was in person’s mind. Natural and probable consequences of the action

shall be construed as intended

▪ The People (DPP) –v- Douglas and Hayes

▪ Hyam –v- DPP / R – v- Moloney / R –v- Hancock and Shankland / R –v-

Nedrick / R –v- Woolin (explore development of though on law on

‘indirect intention’.

• Recklessness

o Objective or Subjective?

▪ R –v- Cunningham

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

▪ R –v- Caldwell

▪ The above now found to be restricted by R –v- G

▪ The People (DPP) –v- Murray

• Knowledge

o The People (DPP) –v- Foley

o Hanlon –v- Fleming

• Strict Liability

o CC –v- Ireland & Others

o Whitehouse –v- Lennon and Gay News

o Focus on assessment of the object of the legislation and seriousness of the

crime key for the determination of whether a crime is one of strict liability or

not – M’Adam –v- Dublin United Tramways Company Ltd , Shannon Regional

Fisheries Board –v- Cavan County Council , Maguire –v- Shannon Regional

Fisheries Board , CC case.

o Recent developments since CC: DPP-v-Cagney; Reilly-v-Judge Patwell

(Absolute Liability)

(*Further note)

Complicity in Offences

• Common Design

o R –v- Anderson and Morris

o Has one party exceeded the bounds of the agreed act – The People (DPP) –v-

Murray The People (DPP) –v- Ryan , The People (DPP) –v- Eccles

o The People (DPP) –v- Cumberton (what was contemplated by one, but not

communicated, is not relevant – key is what is tacitly (or expressly) agreed)

o R –v- Ngango Recent UK House of Lords Decision on topic

• Liability also as an Accessory

o s.7(1), Criminal Law Act 1997 – aids, abets, counsels or procures

▪ R –v- Giannetto (the slightest encouragement can be sufficient)

▪ Attorney General’s Reference (No.1 of 1975)

▪ Must know or intend though that your conduct would aid, abet,

counsel or procure - The People (AG) –v- Ryan , The People (DPP) –v-

Egan , The People (DPP) –v- Madden

▪ Withdrawal is possible – but must be complete and visible from

external behaviour – R –v- Whitehouse , R –v- Becerra and Cooper

o s.7(2), Criminal Law Act 1997 – liability for accessories after the fact

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

Homicide

• Murder

o s.4, Criminal Justice Act, 1964 – transferred malice and statutory

acknowledgement at s.4(2) of having intended the natural and probable

consequences. Case law above on mens rea / actus reus often key.

o s.3, Criminal Justice Act, 1990 – formerly known as capital murder.

Recklessness, Attempt. DPP-v-Murray

• Manslaughter

o Assault Manslaughter

▪ R –v- Holzer

▪ R –v- Hayward (psychic assault can be sufficient)

o Criminal Negligence Manslaughter

▪ People (AG) –v- Dunleavy

▪ The People (DPP) –v- Cullagh

o Criminal and Dangerous Act Manslaughter

▪ R –v- Church

▪ People (AG) –v- Crosbie and Meehan

o Corporate Manslaughter – LRC Report 2007, LRC Issue Paper January 2016.

▪ Recommendation for Corporate Crime be enacted.

▪ Corporate manslaughter – corporate liability for manslaughter be based on a test of gross negligence, formulated around a breach of duty.

o

Individual corporate criminal liability - individual offence of manslaughter should apply to ‘high managerial agents’ defined as: “a person being a director, manager or other similar officer of the undertaking, or a person who purports to act in any such capacity, whether or not that person has a contract of employment with the undertaking.”

o

• Infanticide

• Suicide – assistances still criminalised s.2(2) Criminal Law (Suicide Act). Flemming-v-

Ireland

• Euthanasia

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

Non-Fatal Offences Against the Person (1997 Act)

Like many of the offences, these are easily found in parts of questions, across the

exam. Key is knowing the requisite offences, the legislative provision and

identification and exploration of requirements of actus reus and mens rea for

same.

• Assault under s.2

o DPP –v- K (can be indirect application of force)

o R –v- Thomas

o R –v- Ireland

• Assault Causing Harm under s.3(1)

o Distinct offence, considered in Minister for Justice, Equality and Law

Reform –v- Dolny

• Causing Serious Harm

o The People (DPP) –v- Kirwan

• Assault with intent (s.18(1), Criminal Justice (Public Order) Act 1994)

• Threats to kill or seriously harm (s.5(1) of the 1997 Act)

• Syringe Attacks (s.6, s.7, s.8)

• Harassment (s.10)

• Poisoning (s.12)

• Endangerment (s.13)

• False Imprisonment (s.15) – Bird –v- Jones , Kane –v- Governor of Mountjoy

Prison

• Child Abduction (s.16 , s.17)

Sexual Offences

Critical to all sexual offences is inevitably the question of consent – is it full and

informed consent?

• DPP –v- C (must be voluntary agreement or acquiescence……by a person of the

age of consent with the mental capacity….knowledge or understanding of facts

material to the act…..is necessary to be voluntary or constitute acquiescence)

• s.9, Criminal Law (Rape) Amendment Act 1990 – a failure to resist does not

constitute acquiescence or consent. Key as one may be too drunk (R –v-

Malone) / asleep (R –v- Mayers) / fearful of resisting (R –v- Olugboja / R –v-

Wellard)

• Fraud on nature of sexual act –R-v- Williams

• Fraud on quality of act – R –v- Clarence / R-v- Currier

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

• Fraud as to identity –DPP – v- C / Papadimitropoulos –v- R (fraud over personal

attributes will not vitiate consent)

• Note exceptions: DPP-v-Drought

• Rape

o Governed under s.2(1), Criminal Law (Rape) Act 1981. Male specific

offence against women. Mens rea is knowledge or recklessness as to

consent – however, an honest belief that consenting will hold someone

not to have the requisite mens rea – s.2(2).

o DPP –v- Morgan / The People (DPP) –v- McDonagh

• Sexual Assault

o s.2(1), Criminal Law (Rape) (Amendment) Act 1990 – revised the offence

of indecent assault and changed it to a gender-neutral offence – capable

of perpetration by either a man or a woman.

o Naturally an assault to begin with, but question is whether there was a

sexual nature to the assault.

o R –v- Court

o R –v- Bernier

• Aggravated Sexual Assault (s.3(1) of the 1990 Act)

o Sexual assault that either (i) involves the use or threat of serious

violence, or (ii) is such as to cause injury, humiliation or degradation of a

grave nature to the person assaulted

• Rape under s.4 of the 1990 Act

o Broadened the law so as not as limited by the 1981 Act. Be aware of

what elements still fall outside same.

• Sexual Offences Against Children

o The Criminal Law (Sexual Offences) Act 2006 repealed and replaced the

old legislation – s.2(1) , s.3(1). Defence of honest mistake now

introduced and acknowledged – s.2(3) , s.3(5).

o MD (a minor) v Ireland, Attorney General and the DPP. Equality and

legislation. Express differentiation in re. Sexual Intercourse and only

where female is under 17 years.

• Criminal Justice (Sexual Offences) Bill 2015 – reforms of the law, including

stronger sanctions, aimed at protecting children from sexual exploitation; child

pornography and online grooming.

• Incest

o Punishment of Incest Act 1908 – some reform by Criminal Law (Incest

Proceedings) Act 1995

• Mental Impairment

o The Criminal Law (Sexual Offences) Act 1995

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

Property Offences

• Criminal Justice (Theft and Fraud Offences) Act 2001

• Theft

o s.4(1), dishonest appropriation of property, without consent, with intention

of depriving owner of it.

o R –v- Lawrence , People (DPP) –v- O’Loughlin

o Inference of dishonesty may be drawn from conduct – DPP –v- Morrissey

o People (DPP) –v- Keating (offence of stealing in shop may be formed when

goods are taken from shelf)

o Dishonesty is a subjective assessment – emphasised under s.4(5)

• Robbery

o S.14 of 2001 Act – requirement of theft accompanied by

o R –v- Dawson and James (does not need to be of a violent nature)

o R –v- Clauden (no need to resist)

o The People (DPP) –v- Mangan (force can be sufficient if induces fear in the

victim)

• Burglary

o S.12 of the Act – both types of burglary to be noted.

o Question of entry and whether sufficient – R –v- Ryan

o Barker –v- R – may change status to a trespasser from a visitor

o Also aggravated burglary (s.13) – where in possession of firearm, imitation

firearm, weapon or explosive – must have actus reus and mens rea of

possession, as well as that of burglary – R –v- Murphy

• Other offences to be noted

o Handling Stolen Property (s.17)

o Deception Offences (s.6 , s.7)

o Making off without payment (s.8)

o Unlawful use of computer (s.9) **

o False Accounting (s.10)

o Forgery (s.25-s.28)

o Criminal Damage (incl. Arson) – Criminal Damage Act 1991

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

Contempt of Court

• Criminalisation key to protect against conduct that would be destructive to the

general administration of justice.

o State (DPP) –v- Walsh

o State (Keegan) –v- de Burca

• Contempt in the face of the Court – Morris –v- Crown Court / Re: O’Kelly (important

judgement regarding reporters and the offence)

• Scandalising the Court – ‘wild and baseless accusations of corruption so as to lower

judges in the eyes of the public’.

o People (AG) –v- O’Ryan & Boyd

• Sub-judice Rule – again important from reporters perspective – nature of being

unlawful to comment on proceedings which are still in being – only factual reporting

o Kelly –v- O’Neill

Inchoate Offences

• Incitement

o Persuading, coercing, including threats and pressure, or otherwise causing

another to commit a crime

▪ Race Relations Board –v- Applin

▪ People (AG) –v- Capaldi (….[an] action would be an incitement if, but

for it, it would not have occurred to the party incited to commit the

crime, whether he had any particular reluctance to commit it or

not…)

▪ Must be capable of being able to commit the crime – R –v-

Whitehouse

▪ No need to communicate incitement to a person in particular – R –v-

Marlow

▪ Also note Prohibition of Incitement to Hatred Act 1989 – People (DPP)

–v- O’Grady , People (DPP) –v- Callan (Further note)

• Conspiracy

o An agreement to carry out a wrongful act – agreement being the key

element of the actus reus - R –v- Parnell , People (AG) –v- Keane. Must also

be, in mens rea, the intention to agree to commit the unlawful act and that

the person would take some steps in its furtherance (R –v- Anderson)

o Is impossibility a defence to such crime – UK, yes - DPP –v- Nock . R –v- Sew

Hoy. Canada, no - United States of America –v- Dynar.

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

o Also offence of ‘conspiracy to corrupt public morals’ seen in Knuller –v- DPP ,

SPUC –v- Open Door Counselling Ltd . Rejected in Australia – R –v- Cahill

o Criminal Justice Act 2006 – S.71.

• Attempt

o People (AG) –v- Thornton – an attempt is an act done by the accused with a

specific intent to commit a crime, which must go beyond mere preparatory

acts.

o Key therefore is whether the act is sufficiently proximate to the commission

of the crime in order to constitute an offence

▪ R –v- Jones

▪ R –v- Campbell

▪ Irish law not very generous on question of proximity, see Thornton ,

The People (AG) –v- Sullivan

▪ Mens rea for the specific substantive offence must also be present –

The People (DPP) –v- Douglas and Hayes

Defences

Vital area to prepare – must be able to explore individual defences in detail for an

essay style question focused on one in particular and also to bring same in and

analyse as part of a problem based question focusing on someone’s ‘criminal

liability’

• Lawful Use of Force

o Non-fatal offences – s.18 – 20 of the 1997 Act

o Fatal – necessity and proportionality – may be full defence, or reduce murder

to manslaughter (People (AG) –v- Dwyer)

▪ People (AG) –v- Keatley

▪ People (DPP) –v- Commane

▪ R –v- McInnes (not viable if opportunity to retreat)

▪ People (AG) –v- Coffey , DPP for Northern Ireland –v- Browne (no use

if ulterior motive / have created the situation)

▪ The People (DPP) –v- Barnes

▪ The People (DPP) –v- Nally

▪ Criminal Law (Defence and the Dwelling) Act 2011

• Insanity & Automatism

o Substantial reform by the Criminal Law (Insanity) Act 2006 – old law seen

from R –v- M’Naghten

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

o Disease of the mind a key criteria – analysed in various cases, R –v- Kemp ,

Bratty –v- AG for Northern Ireland , R –v- Quick (hypoglycaemia – external

factor – automatism) , R –v- Hennessy (hyperglycaemia – internal factor –

insanity)

o Must cause a defect of reason

▪ People (DPP) –v- O’Donnell

▪ People (AG) –v- Hayes

o Irresistible impulse – codified by s.5(1) of the 2006 Act – Doyle –v- Wicklow

County Council

o Diminished Responsibility – s.6 of 2006 Act re: murder.

o Must cause a defect of reason

o External influences causing a defect of reason – see diabetes cases

mentioned above as examples. Some debate as to ‘disassociative state’ and

whether insanity / automatism defence – R –v- Falconer , R –v- Stone , R –v-

Rabey

o Application of Gallagher (No.2) (1996) - cannot be detained on grounds of

risk alone as this would be preventative detention.

o Problems with 2006 Act – Michael Greaney. Found not guilty by reason of

insanity of assault causing harm, and false imprisonment. Psychiatrist report

recommended Order be lifted that he stay away from the family home.

Granted by the judge. Two days later it was discovered he killed his wife,

daughter and himself. Raises question. Cases demonstrates law is in fact of

need of reform to strengthen the rights of the individuals concerned, e.g.

there is a need for more frequent reviews of detention by the Review Board

as the cases of those detained under the civil legislation - the Mental Health

Act 2001 - are reviewed more frequently. The law also urgently needs to be

changed to remove the "insanity" label from such individuals, a label which is

entirely inappropriate and anachronistic.

• Intoxication

o Was person so intoxicated so as to be incapable of forming the mens rea

required.

o People (AG) –v- Manning – mere drunkenness is not sufficient

o R –v- Lipman – can be intoxication by drink or drugs

o Distinction to be drawn between crimes of specific and basic intent, as

defence not open for reliance for crimes of basic intent

▪ DPP –v- Beard

▪ DPP –v- Majewski

▪ The People (DPP) –v- Reilly

o Self-induced intoxication / ‘Dutch Courage’ not open for the defence to be

relied upon – AG for Northern Ireland –v- Gallagher

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

www.citycolleges.ie 1850252740 [email protected]

• Duress

o Not suitable as defence for murder, The People (AG) –v- Whelan

o Did it overbear the ordinary power of human resistance? Was there an

opportunity for the will to reassert itself? Was there an opportunity to

escape?

▪ R –v- Howe (objective standard)

▪ R –v- Hudson & Taylor (must be a level of immediacy)

▪ R –v- Conway (proximity of relationship to threatened person may

also be an issue

▪ R –v- Hurley and Murray

▪ DPP for Northern Ireland –v- Fitzpatrick (defence unavailablle where

person has voluntarily exposed themselves to the risks inherent)

▪ R –v- Martin

▪ R –v- Abdul-Hussain

o Note for an essay question, the comments of Law Reform Commission on its

Consultation Paper on Duress and Necessity

• Necessity

o Classical exposition of limit and scope of defence seen in R –v- Dudley and

Stephens

o See also Re: A (Children)

• Provocation (*address inline with Chapter on Homicide)

o Defence only to murder – for other crimes only a factor to be considered

when passing sentence. Factors of key assessment are the extent of loss of

self-control caused by the provocation and the reasonableness of the

reaction to the provocation:

▪ The People (DPP) –v- MacEoin

▪ The People (DPP) –v- Mullane

▪ The People (DPP) –v- Kelly

▪ The People (DPP) –v- Delaney

o Problems with defence – because test subjective in Ireland

▪ The People (DPP) v. Kieran Lynch [2015] IECCA 6. ▪ The People (DPP) v. Hussain [2014] IECCA 26 ▪ The People (DPP) v. Curran [2011]3 IR 785. ▪ The LRC has recommended a draft legislative provision effectively

bringing in a modified objective standard to apply where provocation is raised.

o “Sudden and temporary loss of self-control.” “Concession to human frailty”

(Charleton)

• Mistake

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© Brendan Foley, City Colleges

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o Ignorance of the law / mistaken understanding is no defence – R –v- Reid ,

People (DPP) –v- Healy

o Mistake on facts though may justify a defence in circumstances – e.g. honest

mistake as to force / protection of persons / whether person was consenting

to sexual intercourse (*see Chapter on Sexual Offences)

▪ People (AG) –v- Dwyer

▪ DPP –v- Morgan

• Unconstitutionality

o CC –v- Ireland

In Damache v DPP & AG, IESC [201] (“Damache”) the Supreme court decided

that Section 29(1) of the Offences against the State Act, 1939 as

unconstitutional. S.29(1) permitted a person, not independent of an

investigation, to issue a search warrant for the purposes of the investigation.

The court found that a police officer engaged in an investigation is not an

independent person for these purposes and therefore that his warrant was

issued in breach of the constitution.

Procedural Elements in Criminal Law

• Courts of Criminal Jurisdiction in Ireland – be able to run through and explain same

and the applicable jurisdiction for each. (*Further Notes in manual: Court of Criminal

Appeal, Central Criminal Court and Special Criminal Court composition and

jurisdiction are popular questions)

o Scope, Composition, Jurisdiction (Appellate Jurisdiction – if any, e.g., District

Court has none)

• Arrest – without warrant (s.4, Criminal Law Act 1997)

o Only in respect of arrestable offences

• Arrest – with warrant

o Structure of same on basis of ‘complaint’, must be raised and presented in

good faith

• Rights and general principles

o To be informed of basis – DPP –v- Connell , The People (DPP) –v- Walsh

o Reasonable Expedition – The People (DPP) –v- Boylan , The People (DPP) –v-

Cleary

o To be charged at first reasonable opportunity – Dunne –v- Clinton

o Reasonable access to legal representation - DPP v Gormley [2014]

Questioning cannot begin until Solicitor arrives and - possibly - Solicitor

should be allowed sit in during interviews

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• This 2014 Gormley case Alters previous regime under Lavery v MIC

Carrickmacross, DPP v Gormally {2010 - not 2014], DPP v O’Brien, DPP

v Finnegan, DPP v Buck

• Detention (note time periods, requirements for each provision)

o s.4, Criminal Justice Act 1984

o s.30, Offences Against the State Act 1939 – The People (DPP) –v- Byrne / The

People (DPP) –v- Kelly / The People (DPP) –v- Farrell

o s.2, Criminal Justice (Drug Trafficking) Act 1996

o s.50, Criminal Justice Act 2007 • Presumption of Innocence

o Article 38.1

• Woolmington –v- DPP

• The People (DPP) –v- D.O’T

• O’Leary –v- AG

• Hardy –v- Ireland

• The Right to Silence

o Being chipped away at by legislation?

o Heaney –v- Ireland – s.52, Offences Against the State Act 1939

o Heaney and McGuiness –v- Ireland (on appeal to ECHR)

o Rock –v- Ireland – s.18 / 19, Criminal Justice Act 1984

o Now amended by ss. 28 and 29, Criminal Justice Act 2007

• Bail

o People (AG) –v- O’Callaghan

o Bail Act 1997, amended by the Criminal Justice Act 2007

• Spent Convictions

o Criminal Justice (Spent Convictions and Certain Disclosures) Bill 2012. Passed

into law on 6th February 2016, not signed into law yet.

o Certain minor convictions more than 7 years old will become ‘spent’ and no

longer have to be declared, thus removing barriers to employment,

education, training, housing and insurance for tens of thousands of people in

Ireland who have moved on from past offending behaviour.

• Fingerprints and DNA Database

• Criminal Justice (Forensic Evidence and DNA Database System) Act, 2014. Fully

enacted November 2015.

• New regime for obtaining and retaining forensic samples for evidential purposes

• General Note

• The City Colleges Criminal Law manual was comprehensively updated in 2011 to

deal with the procedure section of the criminal syllabus to the levels and extent

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required by the Law Society examiner. It is noteworthy that the level of criticism

levelled against candidates attempting and poorly answering the procedural

questions has been high. Deference to the manual and lecture notes will assist

students to this end.

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Criminal Law Outline

Introduction: overview of criminal offences and criminal law

A brief introduction to how criminal liability operates

Difference between criminal wrongs and civil wrongs and difficulties in defining what

a crime is

The place of criminal law in the legal system: how criminal offences are made:

legislation and judge-made law

Applying precedent (past cases) and applying legislation (statutes)

Constitutional restraints on what can be designated as criminal and

ongoing debates about criminalisation

Functions of the criminal law: form of social control (a system of rules): to

regulate and prohibit; orders with punitive sanction behind them

Deterrence, retribution and other principles of punishment

The criminal law system and the criminal trial

The main features of the criminal process

Court structure – trial courts and appeal courts

Classification of crime: Summary offences and indictable offences

Brief outline of trial procedure: prosecution and defence

The presumption of innocence and the burden of proof

Rules of evidence: exclusionary rule and hearsay rule

Sentencing procedure, policy, and principles

Part B: Criminal Liability – The General Part

The actus reus – the external elements of offences

The concept of criminal liability; the way liability operates

The actus reus (prohibited act) the mens rea (guilty mind)

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Offences and defences

The principles and rules that apply to the actus reus

Voluntariness: the need for a defendant to have been the author of his or her

actions

Causation: the need for a causal link between defendant’s actions and a prohibited

result, and the kind of intervening acts which are considered to break this link

Liability for omissions: the extent to which you can be held criminally liable for not

doing something as distinguished from doing something

Mens rea – culpability requirements of offences

The concept of mens rea: the need for a person to be mentally culpable – such that

he or she can be said to be blameworthy or at fault – in order for criminal liability to

be imposed on him or her

Different culpability states: intention, recklessness and others

Intention: direct intention and oblique intention

Recklessness: consciously taking an unjustifiable risk; advertent and inadvertent

recklessness

Strict liability: the extent to which you can be held liable for your actions in respect

of which you are blameless or blameworthy to a relatively minor degree

The relevance of intoxication: might extreme drunkenness exculpate?

The relevance of mistake: mistake of law and mistake of fact

Relationship between external elements and mental elements of offences

Coincidence of actus reus and mens rea

Transferred malice

Part C: General principles expanding and reducing criminal liability

Secondary liability

Liability for participation in crime: to “aid, abet, counsel or procure” a crime attracts

criminal liability as if one performed the crime oneself

Doctrine of common design: the extent to which you can be held liable for the

actions of your associates when embarking together on a criminal enterprise

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Inchoate liability

Criminal liability for attempting, inciting and conspiring to commit crimes

So-called impossible attempts: is it attempted murder to shoot, with intent

to kill, what is actually a dummy, mistakenly believing it’s your enemy?

Defences: infancy, insanity, self-defence, provocation, duress and necessity

Child under 12 years not to be prosecuted (subject to exceptions)

The legal concept of insanity and its relevance to criminal liability

Diminished responsibility as a defence to murder

The limits of self-defence; killing in self-defence or “legitimate defence”

Provocation as a defence to murder

The defence of duress and its limits

The scope for necessity to be a defence

Part D: Criminal Liability – the Special Part

Homicide: Murder and Manslaughter

The elements and scope of murder

Manslaughter: Gross negligence manslaughter, and unlawful and dangerous act

manslaughter

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Dublin City Centre (Dublin 2) and Online Website: www.citycolleges.ie Phone: 01-4160034 Email: [email protected] Head of Law: Philip Burke, LLB, BL (087 7679 576) The next course commences June 2016. Lectures are delivered by some of the most experienced and inspiring law lecturers in the country and are also streamed live as well as recorded and made available for review online.

Ireland’s best, and most experienced FE1 law lecturers, including Brendan Foley, Philip Burke, Mark Cockerill, Caroline Bergin-Cross, Trish Cronin and Ciarán Lawlor

The most up-to-date and comprehensive FE1 manuals

Live lectures which are also streamed live on Moodle, and are recorded for review

Exam question and solution bank

Dedicated exam review and preview classes

End of course tutorials, as well as memory and study technique classes

City Centre location on South Great George’s Street, convenient for bus, LUAS, DART, etc.

Study rooms

Limited class size Course Fees: €325 per subject, or €2,100 for eight subjects Apply online at www.citycolleges.ie or call 01-4160034