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Elements of a Crime

Elements of a Crime. Learning Goal: . By the end of this lessons, I will be able to accurately define and identify the essential elements of a criminal offence. Elements of an offence .

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Elements of a Crime

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  1. Elements of a Crime

  2. Learning Goal: • By the end of this lessons, I will be able to accurately define and identify the essential elements of a criminal offence.

  3. Elements of an offence • To obtain a conviction the crown must be able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that each and every element of the offence with which the accused is charged was in fact committed by the accused.

  4. Elements of a Crime Criminal offences are made up of two basic elements: • ACTUS REUS – the prohibited act • MENS REA – criminal intent

  5. Actus Reus • Physical conduct of the accused • Act or failure to act that has been identified by Parliament as harmful • Most offences contained in the Criminal Code specify the wrongful action exist

  6. Actus Reus Example: • Criminal Code s.222(1) “ a person commits homicide when directly or indirectly by any means he causes the death of a human being.” • The actusreusin this case is “causing the death of a human being”

  7. Actus Reus • Some offences, the actusreuscan result from failure to do something • “to withhold necessities from someone your legally obligated to provide for” • Other offences require only a certain state of being • Possession of break-in instruments

  8. Mens Rea • Involves the mental state of the accused • Latin phrase: an act does not become guilty unless the mind is guilty • The mensreaof a Criminal offence is the mental element that accompanies the commission of the actusreus. • The crown must be able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused was of a guilty mind at the time the crime was committed

  9. Mens Rea The mental state required for mensreato exist falls into two possible categories • 1. Intent or Knowledge • 2. Recklessness

  10. Men Rea The law considers some people to be incapable of forming the intent necessary to commit a wrongful action: 1. Those suffering from a mental disorder 2. Minors, or infants- under the age of 12 3. Those under the influence of drugs or alcohol to such an extent that they do not understand the nature of their actions

  11. The Criminal Equation Actus Reus + Mens Rea = Crime

  12. Defining Crime Worksheet

  13. Intent Intent means… • He/she means to do something wrong • Knows or should have foreseen the results of the wrongful act

  14. General Intent • a person commits a wrongful act for its own sake, without an ulterior motive or purpose • Example: theft • easier to prove than specific intent

  15. Specific Intent • when someone commits one wrongful act for the sake of accomplishing another • Example: shooting the store clerk during a robbery • To prove Mensreato commit robbery, the Crown has to show not only that he/she shot the victim (general intent) but that he/she did so with the specific intent of stealing from the victim

  16. Subjective Intent • Concerns the accuser’s state of mind at the time of commission of the guilty act • Focuses on the actual knowledge of the individual accused • In such cases, only the accuser’s actual intention or knowledge of the effects of his or her conduct or the facts surrounding it is relevant

  17. Subjective Intent: Knowledge • In order to have the mensreato commit a crime, the courts assume a person must have some knowledge of the actusreusof the crime • This is sometime indicated by the words “knowing” or “knowingly” in the definition of the crime

  18. Subjective Intent: Knowledge • S. 251 • (1) Every one who knowingly • (b) sends an aircraft on a flight or operates an aircraft that is not fit and safe for slightly…if guilty of an indictable offence… • The Crown has to prove the accused knew the aircraft was not fit and safe for a flight

  19. Subjective Intent: Willfully • S. 319 • (2) Every one who by communicating statements, other than in private conversation, willfully promotes hatred against any identifiable group is guilty of • A) an indictable offence and is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years;….

  20. Objective Intent • Involves determining what a reasonable person would have understood, perceived or foreseen in the circumstances • Less concerned with the actual knowledge of the accused • The accused was not acting reasonably

  21. Objective Intent: Criminal Negligence • Criminal Negligence: Proving that the accused showed negligence which means the accused failed, under certain circumstances to take precautions that an reasonable person would take to avoid causing harm to another

  22. Objective Intent: Recklessness • A person is said to be reckless when s/he is extremely careless or heedless of apparent danger • S/he understands the real risk of such consequences and persists or is reckless in the conduct anyway s/he will be deemed to have the subject intent necessary for criminal liability

  23. Objective Intent: Recklessness • S. 219 • (1) Everyone is criminally negligent who • (a) is doing anything, or • (b) in omitting to do anything that is his duty to do, show wanton or reckless disregard for the lives and safety of other persons • Crown must show • Accused was aware of the danger involved • Even if s/he did not intend the consequence

  24. Objective Intent: Willful Blindness • Is related to recklessness • Involves deliberately closing you mind to the possible consequences of your actions • When s/he suspects a harmful or criminal outcome but prefers not to ask the questions that would confirm these suspicions • Ex. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U1o3BiOcq8A

  25. Difference between Subjective and Objective Intent • Subjective: focuses on the actual knowledge if the individual is accused • Objective: less concerned with actual knowledge of the accused • Accused not acting reasonably

  26. Example • R v. Lamb • Larry Lamb was a young man who owned a revolver that had a five chambered cylinder that rotated clockwise each time the trigger was pulled. • Lamb, jokingly, pointed the revolver at his best friend, and pulled the trigger, knowing that the two chambers were empty. However when Lamb pulled the trigger the chamber rotated and he shot his best friend. He died. • Did Lamb subjectively intend to cause death? If no, does that mean that Lamb is blameless for his friends death?

  27. Practice • Bernice, a 6 year old was playing with her father’s rifle and killed her friend, Jack • Sergia, while hunting with some friends was aiming at a deer and accidentally shot another hunter, Jeff • Lucio, who escaped from a psychiatric institution, shot and killed his wife

  28. Review • ACTUS REUS--- THE ACT • MENS REA- MENTAL STATE (Intent)

  29. The Criminal Equation Actus Reus + Mens Rea = CRIME Voluntary or intention Conscience act or knowing omission willful reckless careless

  30. Case Study It is an offence under environmental protection legislation to discharge pollutants into a waterway. The Crown can prove that Company X discharged pollutants into the Grand River (actusreus). What is the mensreathat the Crown must prove in this case?

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