SlideShare a Scribd company logo
A2 Law RevisionHow to do…..Section A Questions
Attempts‘The Criminal Attempts Act 1981 was intended to improve the law on attempts. The extent to which it has succeeded is open to doubt’Critically evaluate the accuracy of this statement
AO1 Actus ReusFirstly you need to define the Criminal Attempts Act as being a piece of codifying legislation that holds the required mens rea and actus reusAttempting to commit an offence“1) If, with intent to commit an offence to which this section applies, a person does an act which is more than merely preparatory to the commission of the offence, he is guilty of attempting to commit the offence”.
“More than merely preparatory”Gullefer; The former Lord Chief Justice, Lord Lane, decided that the attempt could not be said to begin until the defendant embarked upon 'the crime proper'. Gullefer's actions when he jumped onto the track, therefore, were merely acts in preparation for the later crime of theft and, at that time, he could not be said to be guilty of an attempt.Jones; The Court of Appeal agreed that the acts of obtaining the gun, shortening it, loading it, putting on a disguise and going to the school were merely preparatory to the commission of the offence. The judges added, however, that 'once he had got into the car, taken out the loaded gun and pointed it at the victim with the intention of killing him there was sufficient evidence for the consideration of the jury on the charge of attempted murder'. The appeal, therefore, was dismissed
Campbell and Geddes; Both convictions, however, were quashed on appeal on the finding that the acts were not more than merely preparatory. While the appeal court appeared to be convinced in both cases that the defendants had the necessary intention to commit the crimes in question, they nevertheless felt bound to conclude that the actions were not advanced enough to merit a conviction.
Mens reaThis is seen in;Mohan; The jury were directed that the prosecution had to prove that D realised that such wanton driving would be likely to cause bodily harm. Held: Intent is an essential ingredient of an attempt and is only mens rea of attempts. Recklessness would often suffice as the mens rea for the full offence, attempt was a separate and often more serious offence with its own separate mens rea.
Whybrow; Only intent to kill suffices for attempted murder, because "the intent becomes the principal ingredient of the crime".  Intent to cause grievous bodily harm was sufficient mens rea for the full offence of murder.
Particular relevance of recklessness in relation to circumstancesAs seen in AG ref (no 3 of 1992) 1994D was acquitted of attempted arson with intent to endanger lives or with recklessness as to whether lives are endangered.  Held: It was only necessary to prove an intent to cause damage by fire and then recklessness as to whether lives are endangered thereby. Not guilty, but would be now
Conditional IntentAs seen in Easom; "In every case of theft the appropriation must be accompanied by the intention of permanently depriving the owner of his property. What may be loosely described as a 'conditional' appropriation will not do. If the appropriator has it in mind merely to deprive the owner of such of his property as, on examination, proves worth taking and then, finding that the booty is valueless to the appropriator, leaves it ready to hand to be repossessed by the owner, the appropriator has not stolen. "Not guilty
AG Ref no 1 and 2 (1979); Conditional intent will suffice, meaning quite simply that all that is required is intent to steal at the time of entry. It is not necessary to prove what was the objected that D intended to steal. If it subsequently turns out that there is nothing worth stealing in the building, the defendant still may be prosecuted for burglary.Similar considerations apply where the charge relates to attempted burglary.Not guilty, but would be now
ImpossibilityDiscuss as per S1, 2 and 3 Criminal Attempts ActAnderton v Ryan; D bought a video recorder believing it to be stolen when it was not. Held: D mistakenly believed - subjectively - it was possible to commit the full offence.  It was objectively impossible to commit it.   It would be an 'asinine' result if convicted.  Parliament cannot have intended such a result. s 1 of the Criminal Attempts Act 1981, which overruled the common law of attempt, creates the offence of attempting a crime, which is objectively impossible.  Not guilty
Shivpuri; D attempted to deal and harbour drugs.   He believed he might be dealing with a prohibited drug such as cannabis or heroin whereas in fact the substance was harmless powdered vegetable matter, snuff or cabbage.Held: The House of Lords overturned its previous decision in Anderton v Ryan. Any attempt to commit an offence carries liability if D Intended to carry out the substantive offence and Did an act that was more than merely preparatory, Even though completion was impossible. Guilty
Reformhttp://www.justice.gov.uk/lawcommission/areas/conspiracy-and-attempts.htmThese are the ideas and suggestions but none are implemented, made in 2009 - 2010
SentencingAs per S.4 of the Criminal Attempts Act 1981
AO2Discuss any or all of the following areas;The problems that come from the various tests from the various casesThe idea behind attempts is a need to stop criminal behaviour before an offence is committedThe need to balance the rights of people and the protection of people, punishment for contemplation or minimal activity in pursuit of a crime
The desire of parliament to make the decision in these cases down to the jury and their common sensePractical difficulties in application of the various tests and lawIssues in relation to levels of mens rea, particularly in attempted murderProposals for reform – would the US system work better?
Issues with sentencing inconsistenciesDoes the current law provide deterrent?

More Related Content

PPTX
ATTEMPT AND CRIMINAL CONSPIRACY
PPT
Conspiracy
PPTX
criminal law - "Actus non facit reum nisi men sit rea"
PPTX
conspiracy under torts
PPT
Esguerra Lecture on Top 25 Criminal Law Bar Topics (1979-2007)
PPT
Law of torts....updated.06.08.2015
PPTX
DOC
(6) extortion
ATTEMPT AND CRIMINAL CONSPIRACY
Conspiracy
criminal law - "Actus non facit reum nisi men sit rea"
conspiracy under torts
Esguerra Lecture on Top 25 Criminal Law Bar Topics (1979-2007)
Law of torts....updated.06.08.2015
(6) extortion

What's hot (20)

DOC
Torts defamation iii
PPT
Intentional Tort
DOCX
Syed Faisal Hayat
PPTX
Coercion
PDF
An introduction to law of torts
PPTX
PDF
Eth 321 final exam guide
DOCX
Tort Law
PPTX
Justifyingcircumstance
PPTX
Sale of immovable property
PPTX
Law of torts –unit 1
PPTX
DOCX
TRESPASS TO PERSON BY SATYAM THAKUR
PPTX
Law of torts Introduction
DOCX
Definition of tort
PDF
LLB LAW NOTES ON LAW OF TORTS
PPTX
Learning plan week 2 torts
PPTX
Exempting circumstance
DOCX
Indian and English Laws on Coercion.
PPTX
What is tort law?
Torts defamation iii
Intentional Tort
Syed Faisal Hayat
Coercion
An introduction to law of torts
Eth 321 final exam guide
Tort Law
Justifyingcircumstance
Sale of immovable property
Law of torts –unit 1
TRESPASS TO PERSON BY SATYAM THAKUR
Law of torts Introduction
Definition of tort
LLB LAW NOTES ON LAW OF TORTS
Learning plan week 2 torts
Exempting circumstance
Indian and English Laws on Coercion.
What is tort law?
Ad

Similar to How do i....... part a (20)

DOCX
Law-Exchange.co.uk Shared Resource
PPT
Unit 5 - Stages of Crime Inchoate Crime.ppt
PPTX
Attempts
PPTX
Fundamentals of Criminal Law in Canada
DOCX
Law of torts notes
PPTX
Attempts
PPTX
Intoxication
PPTX
INCHOATE OFFENSE.pptx
DOC
Law-Exchange.co.uk Shared Resource
DOC
Law-Exchange.co.uk Shared Resource
PPT
Serena Essapour | Criminal Law III Summer Qtr 2010 Week 1 Attempts
PDF
Mens Rea
PDF
1-131118073532-phpapp02.pdf
PDF
Essay On Bank Robbery
PPT
Serena Essapour | Criminal Law III Winter Start Week 2 Summer 2010
PDF
The law of Torts trespass negligence and occupiers liability and independent ...
PPTX
The Elements of a Crime
PPTX
Business Law Chater 6
PPTX
Intddddddddd-to-Criminal-Law-Slides.pptx
DOCX
Stages in Commission of a Crime
Law-Exchange.co.uk Shared Resource
Unit 5 - Stages of Crime Inchoate Crime.ppt
Attempts
Fundamentals of Criminal Law in Canada
Law of torts notes
Attempts
Intoxication
INCHOATE OFFENSE.pptx
Law-Exchange.co.uk Shared Resource
Law-Exchange.co.uk Shared Resource
Serena Essapour | Criminal Law III Summer Qtr 2010 Week 1 Attempts
Mens Rea
1-131118073532-phpapp02.pdf
Essay On Bank Robbery
Serena Essapour | Criminal Law III Winter Start Week 2 Summer 2010
The law of Torts trespass negligence and occupiers liability and independent ...
The Elements of a Crime
Business Law Chater 6
Intddddddddd-to-Criminal-Law-Slides.pptx
Stages in Commission of a Crime
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
master seminar digital applications in india
PDF
Practical Manual AGRO-233 Principles and Practices of Natural Farming
PPTX
Tissue processing ( HISTOPATHOLOGICAL TECHNIQUE
PPTX
Radiologic_Anatomy_of_the_Brachial_plexus [final].pptx
PDF
RTP_AR_KS1_Tutor's Guide_English [FOR REPRODUCTION].pdf
PPTX
Orientation - ARALprogram of Deped to the Parents.pptx
PDF
Microbial disease of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
PDF
2.FourierTransform-ShortQuestionswithAnswers.pdf
PDF
A GUIDE TO GENETICS FOR UNDERGRADUATE MEDICAL STUDENTS
PDF
Yogi Goddess Pres Conference Studio Updates
PDF
Paper A Mock Exam 9_ Attempt review.pdf.
PDF
OBE - B.A.(HON'S) IN INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE -Ar.MOHIUDDIN.pdf
PPTX
UNIT III MENTAL HEALTH NURSING ASSESSMENT
PPTX
Introduction-to-Literarature-and-Literary-Studies-week-Prelim-coverage.pptx
PDF
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
PDF
ChatGPT for Dummies - Pam Baker Ccesa007.pdf
PDF
Weekly quiz Compilation Jan -July 25.pdf
PDF
RMMM.pdf make it easy to upload and study
PPTX
1st Inaugural Professorial Lecture held on 19th February 2020 (Governance and...
PPTX
History, Philosophy and sociology of education (1).pptx
master seminar digital applications in india
Practical Manual AGRO-233 Principles and Practices of Natural Farming
Tissue processing ( HISTOPATHOLOGICAL TECHNIQUE
Radiologic_Anatomy_of_the_Brachial_plexus [final].pptx
RTP_AR_KS1_Tutor's Guide_English [FOR REPRODUCTION].pdf
Orientation - ARALprogram of Deped to the Parents.pptx
Microbial disease of the cardiovascular and lymphatic systems
2.FourierTransform-ShortQuestionswithAnswers.pdf
A GUIDE TO GENETICS FOR UNDERGRADUATE MEDICAL STUDENTS
Yogi Goddess Pres Conference Studio Updates
Paper A Mock Exam 9_ Attempt review.pdf.
OBE - B.A.(HON'S) IN INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE -Ar.MOHIUDDIN.pdf
UNIT III MENTAL HEALTH NURSING ASSESSMENT
Introduction-to-Literarature-and-Literary-Studies-week-Prelim-coverage.pptx
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
ChatGPT for Dummies - Pam Baker Ccesa007.pdf
Weekly quiz Compilation Jan -July 25.pdf
RMMM.pdf make it easy to upload and study
1st Inaugural Professorial Lecture held on 19th February 2020 (Governance and...
History, Philosophy and sociology of education (1).pptx

How do i....... part a

  • 1. A2 Law RevisionHow to do…..Section A Questions
  • 2. Attempts‘The Criminal Attempts Act 1981 was intended to improve the law on attempts. The extent to which it has succeeded is open to doubt’Critically evaluate the accuracy of this statement
  • 3. AO1 Actus ReusFirstly you need to define the Criminal Attempts Act as being a piece of codifying legislation that holds the required mens rea and actus reusAttempting to commit an offence“1) If, with intent to commit an offence to which this section applies, a person does an act which is more than merely preparatory to the commission of the offence, he is guilty of attempting to commit the offence”.
  • 4. “More than merely preparatory”Gullefer; The former Lord Chief Justice, Lord Lane, decided that the attempt could not be said to begin until the defendant embarked upon 'the crime proper'. Gullefer's actions when he jumped onto the track, therefore, were merely acts in preparation for the later crime of theft and, at that time, he could not be said to be guilty of an attempt.Jones; The Court of Appeal agreed that the acts of obtaining the gun, shortening it, loading it, putting on a disguise and going to the school were merely preparatory to the commission of the offence. The judges added, however, that 'once he had got into the car, taken out the loaded gun and pointed it at the victim with the intention of killing him there was sufficient evidence for the consideration of the jury on the charge of attempted murder'. The appeal, therefore, was dismissed
  • 5. Campbell and Geddes; Both convictions, however, were quashed on appeal on the finding that the acts were not more than merely preparatory. While the appeal court appeared to be convinced in both cases that the defendants had the necessary intention to commit the crimes in question, they nevertheless felt bound to conclude that the actions were not advanced enough to merit a conviction.
  • 6. Mens reaThis is seen in;Mohan; The jury were directed that the prosecution had to prove that D realised that such wanton driving would be likely to cause bodily harm. Held: Intent is an essential ingredient of an attempt and is only mens rea of attempts. Recklessness would often suffice as the mens rea for the full offence, attempt was a separate and often more serious offence with its own separate mens rea.
  • 7. Whybrow; Only intent to kill suffices for attempted murder, because "the intent becomes the principal ingredient of the crime".  Intent to cause grievous bodily harm was sufficient mens rea for the full offence of murder.
  • 8. Particular relevance of recklessness in relation to circumstancesAs seen in AG ref (no 3 of 1992) 1994D was acquitted of attempted arson with intent to endanger lives or with recklessness as to whether lives are endangered.  Held: It was only necessary to prove an intent to cause damage by fire and then recklessness as to whether lives are endangered thereby. Not guilty, but would be now
  • 9. Conditional IntentAs seen in Easom; "In every case of theft the appropriation must be accompanied by the intention of permanently depriving the owner of his property. What may be loosely described as a 'conditional' appropriation will not do. If the appropriator has it in mind merely to deprive the owner of such of his property as, on examination, proves worth taking and then, finding that the booty is valueless to the appropriator, leaves it ready to hand to be repossessed by the owner, the appropriator has not stolen. "Not guilty
  • 10. AG Ref no 1 and 2 (1979); Conditional intent will suffice, meaning quite simply that all that is required is intent to steal at the time of entry. It is not necessary to prove what was the objected that D intended to steal. If it subsequently turns out that there is nothing worth stealing in the building, the defendant still may be prosecuted for burglary.Similar considerations apply where the charge relates to attempted burglary.Not guilty, but would be now
  • 11. ImpossibilityDiscuss as per S1, 2 and 3 Criminal Attempts ActAnderton v Ryan; D bought a video recorder believing it to be stolen when it was not. Held: D mistakenly believed - subjectively - it was possible to commit the full offence. It was objectively impossible to commit it. It would be an 'asinine' result if convicted. Parliament cannot have intended such a result. s 1 of the Criminal Attempts Act 1981, which overruled the common law of attempt, creates the offence of attempting a crime, which is objectively impossible. Not guilty
  • 12. Shivpuri; D attempted to deal and harbour drugs. He believed he might be dealing with a prohibited drug such as cannabis or heroin whereas in fact the substance was harmless powdered vegetable matter, snuff or cabbage.Held: The House of Lords overturned its previous decision in Anderton v Ryan. Any attempt to commit an offence carries liability if D Intended to carry out the substantive offence and Did an act that was more than merely preparatory, Even though completion was impossible. Guilty
  • 13. Reformhttp://www.justice.gov.uk/lawcommission/areas/conspiracy-and-attempts.htmThese are the ideas and suggestions but none are implemented, made in 2009 - 2010
  • 14. SentencingAs per S.4 of the Criminal Attempts Act 1981
  • 15. AO2Discuss any or all of the following areas;The problems that come from the various tests from the various casesThe idea behind attempts is a need to stop criminal behaviour before an offence is committedThe need to balance the rights of people and the protection of people, punishment for contemplation or minimal activity in pursuit of a crime
  • 16. The desire of parliament to make the decision in these cases down to the jury and their common sensePractical difficulties in application of the various tests and lawIssues in relation to levels of mens rea, particularly in attempted murderProposals for reform – would the US system work better?
  • 17. Issues with sentencing inconsistenciesDoes the current law provide deterrent?