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Defences For The Accused

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The law recognizes two types of automatism: insane automatism, a form caused by ... He was acquitted of first and second degree murder by a jury, using the defence ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Defences For The Accused


1
Defences For The Accused
  • Chapter 10

2
What is a Defence?
  • A defence is a denial of, or a justification for,
    criminal behavior.
  • The most common defence is denial!
  • In other situations an accused may admit to the
    crime but has a defence to excuse or justify his
    or her actions.
  • The accused can either be acquitted or found
    guilty of a less serious offence.
  • The following slides present some of the defences
    an accused can use.

3
Mental Disorder
  • Defined in the criminal code as a disease of the
    mind, it was formally referred to as the
    insanity defence.
  • Goes to mens rea, that is, the accused is unable
    to form the elements of the guilty mind.
  • The onus is on the defence to prove, on the
    balance of probabilities, that the accused
    suffered from a mental disorder and fulfilled one
    of these two requirements
  • The accused is incapable of appreciating the
    nature and quality of the act.
  • The accused is incapable of knowing that the act
    or omission was wrong.

4
  • If the accused is not criminally responsible the
    judge can make an order, with three choices
    available an absolute discharge, a conditional
    discharge or a term in a psychiatric hospital.
  • The judge may also refer the case to the Criminal
    code review board, who would hold a hearing to
    decide the course of action for the accused.
  • The board has the same three choices as the
    judge, with one key difference. If they send the
    accused to a psychiatric hospital, it will be for
    an indefinite period of time, with regular
    reviews.
  • If the board is convinced that the accused has
    been cured, they can order a release. That is why
    this defence is only used in serious cases,
    because the time spent in a mental hospital could
    be longer than a jail term.
  • An accused is unfit to stand trial if they are
    unable to understand the nature of the trial
    proceedings, the consequences of the proceedings
    or are unable to give adequate instructions to
    counsel.

5
Automatism
  • This is a condition in which a person acts
    without being aware of what he or she is doing.
  • It negates the Actus Reus of a crime because the
    person acts involuntarily.
  • Automatism can be the result of sleepwalking,
    medication, a concussion, a brain tumor or
    involuntary ingestion of drugs.
  • The law recognizes two types of automatism
    insane automatism, a form caused by a mental
    disorder, resulting in an accused being not
    criminally responsible, and non-insane
    automatism, a form caused by a external factor.
    Here the accused would be acquitted.

6
Kenneth James Parks
  • In 1987, Kenneth James Parks got into his car,
    drove to the home of his wife's parents and
    brutally attacked the couple, killing his
    mother-in-law with a tire iron and severely
    injuring his father-in-law. He then got back in
    his car and drove to the nearest police station
    to confess his crime. He claimed he had been
    asleep throughout the entire incident. Possible?
    Could a man not only commit murder, but drive his
    car -- twice -- while asleep?
  • He was acquitted of first and second degree
    murder by a jury, using the defence of non-insane
    automatism.

7
Intoxication
  • Intoxication is the condition of being
    overpowered by drugs or alcohol to the point of
    losing self-control.
  • It is not generally a defence to a crime but the
    exception is a crime of specific intent. For
    example, a person may be too intoxicated for the
    specific intent of murder, but would still be
    guilty of manslaughter, a general intent offence.
  • Another exception might be someone so intoxicated
    that it amounts to a mental disorder. However,
    this defence is rarely used and cannot be used in
    cases of assault or sexual assault.
  • This defence can never be used for drinking and
    driving.

8
Self-Defence
  • Self-defence is the use of reasonable force to
    defend against an attack, provided the attack was
    unprovoked and the force used was no more than is
    necessary to defend yourself.
  • If you kill someone while defending yourself, it
    is justified only if you reasonably feared that
    you would be killed or seriously harmed.

9
Battered Woman Syndrome
  • A type of self-defence where the prolonged
    effects of spousal abuse led to the abusive
    spouse being killed by the victim.
  • The Supreme Court of Canada found that the jury
    should be instructed in such cases on three
    elements.
  • Why an abused woman might stay in an abusive
    relationship
  • The nature and extent of the violence that may
    exist in the battering relationship
  • The defendants ability to perceive danger from
    her abuser
  • The syndrome is not a defence in itself. It is a
    psychiatric explanation for the state of mind of
    an abused woman, which can therefore be used to
    justify self-defence.

10
Defence of a Dwelling
  • This is the extension of self-defence to a
    dwelling house. A dwelling house is any building
    or other structure that is occupied on a
    permanent or temporary basis.
  • A person is allowed to defend his or her dwelling
    from unlawful entry and to remove a trespasser if
    he or she has entered.
  • The force used must be reasonable under the
    circumstances.

11
Necessity
  • Necessity is a defence used when the accused had
    no reasonable alternative to committing an
    illegal act.
  • For this defence to succeed, all of the following
    conditions must be met.
  • The accused must show that the act was done to
    avoid a greater harm
  • There was no reasonable opportunity for an
    alternative course of action
  • The harm inflicted must be less than the harm
    avoided.

12
Compulsion or Duress
  • An accused may be excused from committing an
    offence if it was done under compulsion or
    duress, that is, the accused person is forced by
    the threat of violence to commit a criminal act
    against his or her will.
  • It is not a defence in violent crimes!

13
Provocation
  • Any act or insult that causes a reasonable person
    to lose self-control.
  • This defence only applies to murder. To be
    successfully used, the defence must prove all
    four of these elements.
  • A wrongful act or insult occurred
  • This act or insult was sufficient to deprive an
    ordinary person of the power of self-control
  • The person responded suddenly
  • The person responded before there was time for
    passion to cool.
  • It is used to reduce murder to manslaughter. (R
    vs. Stone)

14
Mistakes of Law and Fact
  • A mistake of law is simply ignorance of the law
    and generally can not be used as a defence.
  • The one exception is officially induced error, a
    defence that the accused relied on erroneous
    legal advice from an official responsible for
    enforcing a particular law.
  • A mistake of fact is a defence that the accused
    made an honest mistake that led to the breaking
    of the law. The accused would not have the mens
    rea or guilty mind.

15
Double Jeopardy
  • The legal doctrine that an accused person cannot
    be tried twice for the same offence.
  • Holds true, whether the accused has been
    convicted or acquitted.
  • The only exception is if the Crown appeals based
    on a mistake of law, and the appeals court orders
    a new trial or change in sentence.

16
Alibi
  • A defence raised by the accused claiming that he
    or she was somewhere else when the offence was
    committed.
  • The burden is on the crown, not the accused! If
    the crown cant prove that the accused was there
    when the offence was committed, then the accused
    must be acquitted.

17
Entrapment
  • A defence against police conduct that illegally
    induces the defendant to commit a criminal act.
  • The burden is on the accused to prove entrapment.
    Usually the result of police undercover work. The
    police can present an opportunity to commit a
    crime but cannot harass, bribe or induce a person
    to break the law.
  • If the judge agrees to this defence, the judge
    will stay the proceedings or stop the trial.
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