Regina v Price: CACD 18 Jul 2003

The appellant had been convicted of indecent assault. When inspecting an apartment as a prosective tenant, with the complainant, he had stroked her legs, outside her clothing and below the knee. He appealed saying this was insufficient to constitute an indecent assault.
Held: If the jury believed the complainant’s evidence, and following Court, the acts could constitute an indecent assault.

Citations:

Times 20-Aug-2003

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Court HL 1989
When considering whether an action constituted an indecent assault, the jury was to be asked whether ‘right-minded persons would consider the conduct indecent or not.’
Lord Ackner: ‘It was common ground before your Lordships, and indeed it is . .
CitedRegina v George CCA 1952
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 21 August 2022; Ref: scu.185749

Director of Public Prosecutions v Armstrong-Braun: Admn 5 Oct 1998

A building site was subject to a requirement to move great crested newts before work could proceed. The defendant, a local councillor interfered to prevent a digger destroying the land until the newts had been moved. He appealed his conviction for assault, saying he had acted lawfully in attempting to prevent a crime.
Held: The test of what is reasonable force for self defence was what was objectively reasonable in the light of the actual subjective belief of the defendant as to the circumstances in which he found himself. Sedley LJ said: ‘while an act done in self defence does not lose the protection of the law because the perceived threat turns out not to have been real, what is done in answer to the perceived threat is to be judged by a judicial appraisal of its reasonableness in all the circumstances which, by definition, include the defendant’s honest belief as to the danger he is in.’

Judges:

Brooke LJ, Sedley LJ

Citations:

Times 26-Oct-1998, [1998] EWHC Admin 918

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedBeckford v The Queen PC 15-Jun-1987
(Jamaica) Self defence permits a defendant to use such force as is reasonable in the circumstances as he honestly believed them to be. ‘If then a genuine belief, albeit without reasonable grounds, is a defence to rape because it negatives the . .
CitedRegina v Kimber CACD 1983
For mens rea, it is the defendant’s belief, not the grounds on which it is based, which goes to negative the intent. The guilty state of mind was the intent to use personal violence to a woman without her consent. If the defendant did not so intend, . .
CitedRegina v Scarlett CACD 18-May-1993
The force used by the defendant in self defence was justified even though there was a mistake as to the extent to which force was required. ‘If the mental element necessary to prove an assault is an intention to apply unlawful force to the victim, . .
CitedRegina v Williams (Gladstone) CACD 28-Nov-1983
The defendant believed that the person whom he assaulted was unlawfully assaulting a third party. That person was a police officer, who said he was arresting the other, but did not show his warrant card.
Held: The court considered the issue of . .
CitedRegina v Venna CACD 31-Jul-1975
An assault is an act by which the defendant intentionally or recklessly causes the complainant to apprehend immediate, or to sustain, unlawful personal violence. The jury ought to be directed that the defendant cannot be guilty of an assault unless . .
ApprovedRegina v Owino CACD 1996
The court considered the degree of force a defendant could use in self defence: The test of the appropriate degree of force a person was entitled to use in self-defence was not any degree of force which he believed was reasonable, however well or . .
CitedRegina v Chisam CCA 1963
A defendant’s belief founding a plea of self defence must be both honest and reasonable. A sufficient justification was established if the accused genuinely believed on reasonable grounds that a relative or friend was in imminent danger of injury, . .

Cited by:

See AlsoRegina v Flintshire County Council, Ex Parte Armstrong-Braun CA 20-Feb-2001
A local council introduced a standing order to the effect that an item could not be placed on an agenda without being seconded. In doing so it had failed entirely to consider the fundamental effect this would have on democracy. Independent members . .
See AlsoRegina v Flintshire County Council ex parte Armstrong-Braun Admn 27-Jul-1999
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 21 August 2022; Ref: scu.79988

Regina v K: HL 25 Jul 2001

In a prosecution for an offence of indecent assault on a girl under 16 under the section, it was necessary for the prosecution to prove the absence of a positive belief in the defendant’s mind that the victim was 16 or over. The legislation history showed an anomalous bringing together of different, and conflicting strands of law. The 1956 and 1960 Acts must be read together, and section 14 must be read so as to require proof of mens rea, and for its absence to be a defence.
Lord Steyn he said that it was unhelpful to ‘inquire into the history of subjective views held by individual legislators’ and that the ‘always speaking’ nature of a statute dealing with sexual offences meant that a particular provision had to be interpreted ‘in the world as it exists today, and in the light of the legal system as it exists today’.

Judges:

Bingham of Cornhill, Nicholls, Steyn, Hobhouse and Millett LL, Millet

Citations:

Times 26-Jul-2001, Gazette 06-Sep-2001, [2001] UKHL 41, [2001] 3 WLR 471, [2002] 1 AC 462

Links:

Bailii, House of Lords

Statutes:

Sexual Offences Act 1956 14, Indecency with Children Act 1960 1(1), Criminal Law Amendment Act 1922 2

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedB (A Minor) v Director of Public Prosecutions HL 23-Feb-2000
Prosecution to prove absence of genuine belief
To convict a defendant under the 1960 Act, the prosecution had the burden of proving the absence of a genuine belief in the defendant’s mind that the victim was 14 or over. The Act itself said nothing about any mental element, so the assumption must . .
CitedRegina v Prince 1875
The defendant was convicted of unlawfully taking an unmarried girl under the age of 16 out the possession of her father. The defendant bona fide and on reasonable grounds believed that the girl was over 16.
Held: This provided no defence. ‘It . .
CitedRegina v Tolson CCR 11-May-1889
Honest and Reasonable mistake – No Bigamy
The defendant appealed against her conviction for bigamy, saying that she had acted in a mistaken belief.
Held: A man commits bigamy if he goes through a marriage ceremony while his wife is alive, even though he honestly and reasonably . .
CitedGammon v The Attorney-General of Hong Kong PC 1984
(Hong kong) The court considered the need at common law to show mens rea. A Hong Kong Building Ordinance created offences of strict liability in pursuit of public safety which strict liability was calculated to promote.
Held: Lord Scarman . .
CitedSherras v De Rutzen QBD 2-May-1895
The court considered the need to establish mens rea where it was dealing with something which was one of a class of acts which ‘are not criminal in any real sense, but are acts which in the public interest are prohibited under a penalty’, and ‘There . .
CitedRegina v Kimber CACD 1983
For mens rea, it is the defendant’s belief, not the grounds on which it is based, which goes to negative the intent. The guilty state of mind was the intent to use personal violence to a woman without her consent. If the defendant did not so intend, . .
CitedRex v Forde CCA 1923
A man, under the age of 23, had intercourse with a 15 year-old girl. He was charged with offences against section 5(1) of the 1885 Act and section 52 of the 1861 Act, relating to the same act of intercourse. He pleaded not guilty to the first (more . .
CitedSweet v Parsley HL 23-Jan-1969
Mens Rea essential element of statutory Offence
The appellant had been convicted under the Act 1965 of having been concerned in the management of premises used for smoking cannabis. This was a farmhouse which she visited infrequently. The prosecutor had conceded that she was unaware that the . .
CitedWarner v Metropolitan Police Commissioner HL 1968
The appellant had been convicted of an offence contrary to section 1 of the 1964 Act, of having been found in possession of drugs.
Held: (Reid dissenting) The prosecution had only to prove that the accused knew of the existence of the thing . .
CitedRex v Laws CCA 1928
The defendant had intercourse with a girl aged 15 years and 9 months. He was about a year older.
Held: He could rely on the statutory defence to a charge laid against him under section 5 of the 1885 Act, but he had pleaded guilty to a count of . .
CitedDirector of Public Prosecutions v Rogers 1953
It was not an assault on a girl, for a man to invite an eleven year old girl to touch him (in this case her father) indecently. . .
CitedFairclough v Whipp CCA 1951
The defendant was charged with indecent assault on a girl aged nine. At the man’s invitation the girl had committed an indecent act on the man.
Held: An invitation to another person to touch the invitor could not amount to an assault on the . .
CitedBrend v Wood 1946
The court discussed the need to assume that conviction for an offence required proof of mens rea.
Lord Goddard CJ said: ‘It should first be observed that at common law there must always be mens rea to constitute a crime; if a person can show . .
CitedRex v Keech 1929
K was aged 21 when he had intercourse with a girl under the age of 16 and faced counts of unlawful carnal knowledge and indecent assault, the facts relied on in relation to both sets of counts being the same. The mother of the victim gave evidence . .
CitedRex v Maughan CCA 1934
The defendant was aged 22 and the child between 13 and 16. There were six counts, three of carnal knowledge, three of indecent assault, arising from the same facts. He was acquitted on the carnal knowledge counts, plainly because he made good the . .
CitedRegina v Venna CACD 31-Jul-1975
An assault is an act by which the defendant intentionally or recklessly causes the complainant to apprehend immediate, or to sustain, unlawful personal violence. The jury ought to be directed that the defendant cannot be guilty of an assault unless . .

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Fernandez CACD 22-May-2002
The defendant had been convicted of indecent assault upon a boy aged under 16. He appealed saying that no account had been taken of the fact that he had believed the boy to be eighteen.
Held: Following R v K, that the defendant had been . .
CitedRegina v J HL 14-Oct-2004
The defendant was to have been accused of having unlawful sexual intercourse with a girl under 16. Proceedings could not be brought, because the allegation was more than a year old, and he was instead accused of indecent assault, but on the same . .
CitedSheldrake v Director of Public Prosecutions; Attorney General’s Reference No 4 of 2002 HL 14-Oct-2004
Appeals were brought complaining as to the apparent reversal of the burden of proof in road traffic cases and in cases under the Terrorism Acts. Was a legal or an evidential burden placed on a defendant?
Held: Lord Bingham of Cornhill said: . .
CitedRegina v Kumar CACD 16-Dec-2004
The defendant appealed a conviction for buggery of a complainant under the age of 16, saying that he had a genuine belief that the boy had been of age.
Held: Buggery was not an absolute offence. The amendments to the 1956 Act did not signify . .
CitedKonzani, Regina v CACD 17-Mar-2005
The defendant appealed conviction for inflicting grievous bodily harm on three women, by having unprotected sexual intercourse knowing that he was HIV positive, but without telling the women. Each contracted HIV. The allegation was that he had . .
CitedBrown, Regina v (Northern Ireland) SC 26-Jun-2013
The complainaint, a 13 year old girl had first said that the defendant had had intercourse with her againt her consent. After his arrest, she accepted that this was untrue. On being recharged with unlawful intercourse, he admitted guilt believing he . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 21 August 2022; Ref: scu.88519

Gnango, Regina v: CACD 26 Jul 2010

The defendant appealed against his conviction for murder. He had engaged in a street battle using guns. A bullet from an opponent killed an innocent passer by. The court was asked whether the principles of joint venture and transferred malice could work together.
Held: The defendant’s appeal succeeded. A joint enterprise only existed in such a situation where the defendant could be said to have intended that he should be shot at by his opponent.

Judges:

Thomas, Hooper, Hughes, Gross, Hedley LJJ

Citations:

[2010] EWCA Crim 1691, [2010] WLR (D) 201, [2011] 1 WLR 1414, [2011] 1 All ER 153, [2010] 2 Cr App R 31

Links:

Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Criminal Law Act 1977 2(1), Offence Against the Person Act 1861 18

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedSalisbury’s case 1553
. .
CitedMansell and Herbert’s case 1555
During an attack by force on a house by a group of men who intended to take goods from the house, a woman was killed by a stone thrown by one of the group at another person.
Held: By a majority, they were all guilty of murder: ‘if two fight by . .
CitedRegina v Coney QBD 18-Mar-1882
A public prize-fight was unlawful. Spectators were tried at Berkshire County Quarter Sessions with common assault. The Chairman of Quarter Sessions directed the jury to convict the spectators of common assault on the basis that having stayed to . .
CitedRegina v Anderson; Regina v Morris CACD 1966
The court considered criminal liability under the joint enterprise rule where the principle took the action beyond what had been anticipated. Parker CJ said: ‘It seems to this court that to say that adventurers are guilty of manslaughter when one of . .
CitedNW, Regina v CACD 3-Mar-2010
The appellant, a schoolgirl and her friend were involved in an incident with police officers which rapidly escalated. She said that only she had been involved, but that it was wrong when others quite outside her control became involved on seeing the . .
CitedRahman and Others, Regina v HL 2-Jul-2008
The defendants appealed against their convictions for murder. None had themselves inflicted any violence, but were convicted as part of a joint enterprise. They said they had not known that the principal carried a knife. They said that the evidence . .
CitedBrown and Isaac v The State PC 29-Jan-2003
PC (Trinidad and Tobago) The defendants appealed their convictions for murder on a joint enterprise basis.
Held: If more than one person participates, in whatever capacity, in attacking a victim, each . .
CitedRegina v Powell (Anthony) and Another; Regina v English HL 30-Oct-1997
When the court looked at the issue of foreseeability of murder in an allegation of joint enterprise, there was no requirement to show intent by the secondary party. The forseeability of the risk of the principal committing the offence from the point . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromGnango, Regina v SC 14-Dec-2011
The prosecutor appealed against a successful appeal by the defendant against his conviction for murder. He and an opponent had engaged in a street battle using guns. His opponent had shot an innocent passer by. The court was now asked as to whether . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 21 August 2022; Ref: scu.421025

HM Advocate v Lauchlan and Another: HCJ 14 Jan 2010

Judges:

Lord Kinclaven

Citations:

[2010] ScotHC HCJ – 1

Links:

Bailii

Citing:

See alsoLauchlan and Another v HM Advocate HCJ 5-Jun-2009
The appellants were charged with murder. They appealed against an extension of time given to allow the prosecution to proceed.
Held: The appeal failed. . .
See alsoHM Advocate v Lauchlan and Another SCS 17-Jul-2009
Decision as to preliminary issues raised. . .

Cited by:

See AlsoHM Advocate v Lauchlan and Another HCJ 2-Jul-2010
. .
See AlsoLauchlan and Another v Her Majesty’s Advocate HCJ 8-Feb-2012
. .
See AlsoLauchlan and Another v HM Advocate HCJ 19-Apr-2012
. .
See AlsoO’Neill v The United Kingdom ECHR 13-Nov-2012
. .
See AlsoO’Neill v Her Majesty’s Advocate No 2 SC 13-Jun-2013
The appellants had been convicted of murder, it being said that they had disposed of her body at sea. They now said that the delay between being first questioned and being charged infringed their rights to a trial within a reasonable time, and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Scotland, Crime

Updated: 21 August 2022; Ref: scu.420811

Thakrar and Another v Regina: CACD 5 Jul 2010

The defendants appealed against their convictions for murder, complaining of the admission against them of hearsay evidence from witnesses in Cyprus. Two of the statements had been later retracted.
Held: The convictions stood. The statements had been formal ones taken by the police in Cyprus, and there was no convincing evidence of them having been obtained by oppression.

Judges:

Stanley Burnton LJ, Roderick Evans J, Pert QC J

Citations:

[2010] EWCA Crim 1505

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 78, Criminal Justice Act 2003 121(1)(c)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime, Criminal Evidence

Updated: 21 August 2022; Ref: scu.420217

Winter and Another v Regina: CACD 6 Jul 2010

The defendants, father and son, operated a firework storage facility. Two fire service employees died when a fire was fought. They were thought to have been storing Type 1 fireworks for which they had no licence. They were each convicted of manslaughter by gross negligence.
Held: Though the son’s sentence was reduced for his greater assistance, this application for leave to appeal against conviction failed.
The defendants argued that one of the deceased, being a person employed to film such scenes for the Fire Service and not a fire fighter could not be expected to be present, and so no duty of care was owed to him. The argument was rejected: ‘it is reasonable foreseeable that civilian employees of the fire service in the position of Mr Wembridge may come on to and close to the site of a fire in order to film or photograph it.’
The defendants also argued that the jury had been placed under excessive pressure to reach a verdict. Here the foreman had not accepted the judge’s invitation to say that there was no possibility of a verdict and had instead posed further questions which when answered led to the verdicts. No undue pressure had been applied.

Judges:

Hooper LJ, Gross J, Moss QC J

Citations:

[2010] EWCA Crim 1474

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedOgwo v Taylor HL 19-Nov-1987
A firefighter sought damages for personal injuries from the party negligent in starting a fire, suffered while attending it.
Held: A property owner owes a duty of care to firemen, not, by his negligence, to start a fire, or to create special . .
CitedCaparo Industries Plc v Dickman and others HL 8-Feb-1990
Limitation of Loss from Negligent Mis-statement
The plaintiffs sought damages from accountants for negligence. They had acquired shares in a target company and, relying upon the published and audited accounts which overstated the company’s earnings, they purchased further shares.
Held: The . .
CitedRegina v Shulman, Regina v Prentice, Regina v Adomako; Regina v Holloway HL 1-Jul-1994
An anaesthetist failed to observe an operation properly, and did not notice that a tube had become disconnected from a ventilator. The patient suffered a cardiac arrest and died, and the defendant was convicted of manslaughter, being guilty of gross . .

Cited by:

Criminal appealWembridge Claimants and Others v Winter and Others QBD 30-Jul-2013
There had been a large explosion of fireworks stored in a steel shipping container. The court heard claims in damages from relatives of a firefighter and civilian police support technician who had died, and from others injured in the blast. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 21 August 2022; Ref: scu.420237

Brown, Regina v: CACD 19 May 2010

The defendant appealed against his conviction for assault. In summing up, the judge had mistakenly referred to evidence not put to the jury. He had then attempted to correct the error.
Held: There had been an irregularity, but the judge’s correction was clear. The case was otherwise strong and the conviction was safe.

Judges:

Thomas LJ, Openshaw, MacDuff JJ

Citations:

[2010] EWCA Crim 1337

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 20 August 2022; Ref: scu.420035

Regina v Knight: CACD 1966

Citations:

[1966] 50 Cr App R 304

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Romeo CACD 9-Sep-2003
The defendant appealed his conviction for sex offences, saying the court had misdirected the jury as to the weight to be given to the distress shown by the complainant as corroboration of her allegation.
Held: Old cases should be looked at . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 20 August 2022; Ref: scu.186527

Regina v Mack: 15 Dec 1988

Supreme Court of Canada
Appellant testified at his trial for drug trafficking and, at the close of his defence, brought an application for a stay of proceedings on the basis of entrapment. His testimony indicated that he had persistently refused the approaches of a police informer over the course of six months, and that he was only persuaded to sell him drugs because of the informer’s persistence, his use of threats, and the inducement of a large amount of money. Appellant testified that he had had a drug habit but that he had given up his use of narcotics. The application for a stay was refused and appellant was convicted of drug trafficking. The Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal from that conviction. The central issue here concerns the conceptual basis of the doctrine of entrapment and the manner in which an entrapment claim should be dealt with by the courts.
Held: The appeal should be allowed.
Entrapment occurs when (a) the authorities provide a person with an opportunity to commit an offence without acting on a reasonable suspicion that this person is already engaged in criminal activity or pursuant to a bona fide inquiry, and, (b) although having such a reasonable suspicion or acting in the course of a bona fide inquiry, they go beyond providing an opportunity and induce the commission of an offence. It is essential that the factors relied on by a court relate to the underlying reasons for the recognition of the doctrine in the first place.
The doctrine of entrapment is not dependant upon culpability and the focus, therefore, should not be on the effect of the police conduct on the accused’s state of mind. As far as possible, an objective assessment of the conduct of the police and their agents is required. The predisposition, or the past, present or suspected criminal activity of the accused, is relevant only as a part of the determination of whether the provision of an opportunity by the authorities to the accused to commit the offence was justifiable. Further, there must be sufficient connection between the accused’s past conduct and the provision of an opportunity, since otherwise the police suspicion will not be reasonable. While the accused’s predisposition is of some relevance, albeit not conclusive, in assessing initial approach by the police of a person with the offer of an opportunity to commit an offence, it is never relevant as regards whether they went beyond an offer, since that is to be assessed with regard to what the average non-predisposed person would have done.
The absence of a reasonable suspicion or a bona fide inquiry is significant in assessing the conduct of the police because of the risk that the police will attract people otherwise without involvement in a crime and because it is not a proper use of the police power to randomly test the virtue of people. The presence of reasonable suspicion or the mere existence of a bona fide inquiry will, however, never justify entrapment techniques: the police may not go beyond providing an opportunity regardless of their perception of the accused’s character and regardless of the existence of an honest inquiry.
The following factors may be considered in determining if the police have gone further than providing an opportunity: (1) the type of crime being investigated and the availability of other techniques for the police detection of its commission; (2) whether an average person, with both strengths and weaknesses, in the position of the accused would be induced into the commission of a crime; (3) the persistence and number of attempts made by the police before the accused agreed to committing the offence; (4) the type of inducement used by the police including: deceit, fraud, trickery or reward; (5) the timing of the police conduct, in particular whether the police have instigated the offence or became involved in ongoing criminal activity; (6) whether the police conduct involves an exploitation of human characteristics such as the emotions of compassion, sympathy and friendship; (7) whether the police appear to have exploited a particular vulnerability of a person such as a mental handicap or a substance addiction; (8) the proportionality between the police involvement, as compared to the accused, including an assessment of the degree of harm caused or risked by the police, as compared to the accused, and the commission of any illegal acts by the police themselves; (9) the existence of any threats, implied or express, made to the accused by the police or their agents; (10) whether the police conduct is directed at undermining other constitutional values. This list is not exhaustive.
Entrapment is not a substantive or culpability-based defence and the adoption of rules which historically, and by virtue of the Charter, conform to most substantive defences is neither necessary nor correct.
Objective entrapment involving police misconduct, and not the accused’s state of mind, is a question to be decided by the trial judge, and the proper remedy is a stay of proceedings.
The issue of entrapment should be decided by the trial judge, as opposed to jury, for policy reasons. A judge should consider the question from the perspective of a reasonable person, dispassionate and fully apprised of all the circumstances, and the reasonable person is usually the average person in the community but only when that community’s current mood is reasonable. The issue is maintaining respect for the values which, over the long term, hold the community together. One of those very fundamental values is the preservation of the purity of the administration of justice. A judge is particularly well suited to make this determination. Then, too, the determination of whether the admission of evidence obtained in violation of a Charter right would bring the administration of justice into disrepute is one which should be made by a trial judge. If one of the advantages of allowing claims of entrapment is the development of standards of conduct on the part of the state, it is essential that decisions on entrapment, and those allowing the claim especially, be carefully explained so as to provide future guidance; this is not something the jury process lends itself to.
Before a judge considers whether a stay of proceedings lies because of entrapment, it must be absolutely clear that the Crown has discharged its burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused had committed all the essential elements of the offence. If this is not clear and there is a jury, the guilt or innocence of the accused must be determined apart from evidence which is relevant only to the issue of entrapment. This protects the right of an accused to an acquittal where the circumstances so warrant. If the jury decides the accused has committed all of the elements of the crime, it is then open to the judge to stay the proceedings because of entrapment by refusing to register a conviction. Because the guilt or innocence of the accused is not in issue at the time an entrapment claim is to be decided, the right of an accused to the benefit of a jury trial in s. 11(f) of the Charter is in no way infringed.

Judges:

Dickson CJ and Beetz, Estey, McIntyre, Lamer, Wilson, Le Dain, La Forest and L’Heureux-Dube JJ

Citations:

1988 CanLII 24 (SCC), [1988] 2 SCR 903
Document, [1989] 1 WWR 577

Links:

Canlii

Jurisdiction:

Canada

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Looseley (orse Loosely); Attorney General’s Reference No 3 of 2000 HL 25-Oct-2001
Police Entrapment is no defence to Criminal Act
The defendant complained of his conviction for supplying controlled drugs, saying that the undercover police officer had requested him to make the supply.
Held: It was an abuse of process for the police to go so far as to incite a crime.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 20 August 2022; Ref: scu.658853

Ali Syed, Regina v: CACD 18 Dec 2018

The defendant faced trial on allegations of acts in preparation of terrorism. He wanted to say that he had been encouraged by security officers and argued that he English law as to entrapment was incompatible with his human rights, and now sought leave to refer the point of law to the Supreme Court.

Citations:

[2018] EWCA Crim 2809, [2018] WLR(D) 789, [2019] 1 Cr App R 21, [2019] 4 All ER 260, [2019] Crim LR 442, [2019] 1 WLR 2459

Links:

Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Terrorism Act 2006 5(1), European Convention on Human Rights 6

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Looseley (orse Loosely); Attorney General’s Reference No 3 of 2000 HL 25-Oct-2001
Police Entrapment is no defence to Criminal Act
The defendant complained of his conviction for supplying controlled drugs, saying that the undercover police officer had requested him to make the supply.
Held: It was an abuse of process for the police to go so far as to incite a crime.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Human Rights

Updated: 19 August 2022; Ref: scu.633136

Oldfield, Regina v: CACD 22 Nov 2011

Appeal against conviction and an application for leave to appeal against sentence in a rape case. In relation to conviction, the issue between the parties is whether the appellant should have been allowed to withdraw a plea of guilty which he had entered after taking counsel’s advice. It is well established that if the court gives leave, a plea of guilty may be changed to not guilty right up to the moment when sentence is passed. However, the court will not give leave for a change of plea unless there is good reason to do so.

Citations:

[2011] EWCA Crim 2910, [2012] 1 Cr App R 17

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 19 August 2022; Ref: scu.450060

John Mcleod v The Attorney General New South Wales: PC 23 Jul 1891

The claimant appealed against his conviction in New South Wales for bigamy. He had married originally in New South Wales, but then a second time in Missouri in the US.
Held: The court in New South Wales did not have jurisdiction. The crime alleged occurred on the second marriage which was not within the jurisdiction of the NSW court.

Citations:

[1891] UKPC 31, [1891] AC 455

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Australia

Crime, International

Updated: 19 August 2022; Ref: scu.417743

Davis, Regina (on The Application of) v Criminal Cases Review Commission: QBD 2 Feb 2010

The applicant for judicial review (D) had been convicted and sentenced for an offence under section 3 of the 2003 Act, and recommended for deportation. He sought review of the decision of the respondent not to refer his case to the Court of Appeal for reconsideration. A question had arisen as to the existence of any legal privilege in his relationship with court-appointed counsel
Held: The court assumed that anything so disclosed by D was in fact protected by legal privilege, and in fact there had been no material disclosure here. However it was implicit in a request to the Commission for a reference that privilege was waived. It might have been better for the Commission to have warned the applicant that an approach would be made, but issue had been settled.
The Commission had approached the court appointed counsel, and D now sought the notes of any meeting. It was not for the court in this application ‘to start making orders to counsel, who is now party to the proceedings. That is a matter between him and her, and him and the CCRC, assuming the notes still exist.’

Judges:

Elias J, Calvert-Smith J

Citations:

[2010] EWHC B14 (QB)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Sexual Offences Act 2003 3, Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999 38

Crime, Immigration

Updated: 19 August 2022; Ref: scu.417093

B v Germany: ECJ 1 Jun 2010

ECJ Minimum standards for conditions to be fulfilled by third-country nationals or stateless persons as refugees – Reasons for exclusion from refugee status – Article 12, paragraph 2 b) of Directive 2004/83 / EC – applicant’s past participation in the activities of an organization registered in the list of persons, groups and entities to which Common Position 2001/931/CFSP.

Citations:

C-57/09, [2010] EUECJ C-57/09 – O

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

European

Cited by:

OpinionB v Germany ECJ 9-Nov-2010
ECJ Directive 2004/83/EC – Minimum standards for the grant of refugee status or of subsidiary protection – Article 12 – Exclusion from refugee status – Article 12(2)(b) and (c) – Notion of ‘serious non-political . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Immigration

Updated: 19 August 2022; Ref: scu.416444

B v Germany (Opinion): ECJ 1 Jun 2010

ECJ Minimum standards for conditions to be fulfilled by third-country nationals or stateless persons as refugees – Reasons for exclusion from refugee status – Article 12, paragraph 2 b) of Directive 2004/83 / EC – applicant’s past participation in the activities of an organization registered in the list of persons, groups and entities to which Common Position 2001/931/CFSP

Judges:

Mengozzi AG

Citations:

C-101/09, [2010] EUECJ C-101/09

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Directive 2004/83/EC

Cited by:

OpinionB v Germany ECJ 9-Nov-2010
ECJ (Grand Chamber) Directive 2004/83/EC – Minimum standards for the grant of refugee status or of subsidiary protection – Article 12 – Exclusion from refugee status – Article 12(2)(b) and (c) – Notion of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

European, Crime

Updated: 19 August 2022; Ref: scu.416443

Clarke, Regina v: CACD 9 Oct 2007

Citations:

[2007] EWCA Crim 2532, [2008] 1 Cr App R 33

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedNT, Regina v CACD 31-Mar-2010
The prosecutor appealed against a stay of the prosecution as an abuse. The prosecution had failed give the undertaking necessary on lodging the appeal to the court against whose ruling it wanted to appeal, that it agreed that the defendant should be . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Criminal Practice

Updated: 18 August 2022; Ref: scu.416181

Goodman v Regina: CACD 28 May 2010

The appellant appealed against her conviction for allowing premises to be used for the cultivation of cannabis, saying that the growing was done by her husband.
Held: The appeal failed. The couple were not estranged and there was no evidence to establish that she was as much under his control as she said.

Judges:

Hughes LJ P, Simon J, Thirlwall J

Citations:

[2010] EWCA Crim 1206

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 18 August 2022; Ref: scu.416169

Regina v George and Others: CACD 28 May 2010

The defendants were senior executives of BA. They made interlocutory appeals while undergoing trials for alleged price fixing under section 188 of the 2002 Act. The judge had ruled that the prosecutor need prove dishonesty only as against the defendants, and need not do so as against other parties to the transactions (similar officers of Virgin Atlantic Airways).
Held: The appeals failed. The judge had held that: ‘the language of the section is simple and straightforward. It provides that the offence is committed by an individual who, acting dishonestly, agrees with one or more others to make or implement one of the prescribed arrangements. The adverb ‘dishonestly’ may qualify the verb ‘agrees’ but the subject of the verb is ‘an individual’.’ That analysis was correct. There was no need to prove any dishonesty against other parties.

Judges:

Maurice Kay LJ, Royce, Nicol JJ

Citations:

[2010] EWCA Crim 1148, [2010] WLR (D) 147, [2010] UKCLR 1383, [2010] 4 All ER 984, (2010) 174 JP 313, [2010] Lloyd’s Rep FC 495, [2010] 2 Cr App R 17, [2010] 1 WLR 2676

Links:

Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996, Enterprise Act 2002 188

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Ghosh CACD 5-Apr-1982
The defendant surgeon was said to have made false claims for payment for operations, and was charged under the 1968 Act. He claimed to have been entitled to the sums claimed, and denied that he had been dishonest. The court considered the meaning of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 18 August 2022; Ref: scu.416168

Regina v Moon: CACD 10 Nov 2004

The defendant, a heroin addict said that the encouragement of a police officer to supply her with a small quantity of heroin amounted to entrapment and that her prosecution should have been stayed as an abuse of process. The officer had been feigning withdrawal symptoms and distress, in circumstances where the defendant was able to say, by her evidence in a voir dire, that she had never been a supplier or a runner before or since.
Held: There was no evidence that the appellant had ever dealt or, indeed, ever supplied another addict before, a fact also supported by the appellant’s antecedents as well as by the search of her home in the subsequent January, and: ‘whether the matter is looked through the lens of the proper safeguards of authorisation, or through the lens of the appellant’s absence of predisposition or antecedents, or through the lens of the actual nature of the police activities in relation to this appellant, the conclusion to which we are driven is that this appellant was lured into crime or was entrapped, and that it was a case of causing crime rather than merely providing an opportunity for it, and ultimately that it would be unfair for the State to prosecute her for this offending. In these circumstances, the application to stay for abuse should, we think, have been accepted. ‘

Judges:

Rix LJ, Poole, Evans JJ

Citations:

[2004] EWCA Crim 2872

Links:

Bailii

Citing:

CitedRegina v Latif; Regina v Shahzad HL 23-Jan-1996
The defendant had been lured into the UK by the unlawful acts of customs officers. He claimed abuse of process.
Held: The category of cases in which the abuse of process principles can be applied is not closed. A customs officer committing an . .
CitedNottingham City Council v Amin QBD 2-Dec-1999
Where a plain clothes officers had invited a taxi driver to take them to a destination in breach of his licence without disclosing their identity, and he did so willingly, their evidence was not to be excluded as that of an agent provocateur. . .
CitedRegina v Looseley (orse Loosely); Attorney General’s Reference No 3 of 2000 HL 25-Oct-2001
Police Entrapment is no defence to Criminal Act
The defendant complained of his conviction for supplying controlled drugs, saying that the undercover police officer had requested him to make the supply.
Held: It was an abuse of process for the police to go so far as to incite a crime.

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Moore and Another CACD 13-Feb-2013
The appellants said that they had been entrapped into committing the offences of which they stood convicted. Their applications for stay on the ground of abuse of process had been rejected.
Held: The appeal failed.
Rix Lj said: ‘the . .
DistinguishedJones, Regina v CACD 29-Apr-2010
The defendant appealed against his conviction for incitement to produce cannabis. He had a shop openly and lawfully selling materials for use in the growing of plants, and particularly cannabis. He said that the offence had only occurred after the . .
CitedRegina v Moore and Another CACD 13-Feb-2013
The appellants said that they had been entrapped into committing the offences of which they stood convicted. Their applications for stay on the ground of abuse of process had been rejected.
Held: The appeal failed.
Rix Lj said: ‘the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 18 August 2022; Ref: scu.416172

Cooke, Regina (on the Application Of) v Director of Public Prosecutions: Admn 21 Oct 2008

Appeal by case stated against the decision of the Northampton Magistrates’ Court on 22 February this year to make an anti-social behaviour order (ASBO) against the appellant under section 1C of the Crime and Disorder Act 1998.

Citations:

[2008] EWHC 2703 (Admin), [2008] MHLR 348, (2008) 172 JP 596

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 18 August 2022; Ref: scu.277925

Kenyon v Regina: CACD 11 May 2010

The defendant appealed against her conviction for murder, based upon her own informal confessions to third parties.
Held: The appeal was dismissed. There were proper reasons choices made at trial about what evidence should be put forward, and what challenged, and: ‘the new expert evidence, whilst it adds detail and some fresh assessment to the expert evidence available at trial, would in the end not assist the defendant in contesting this charge and that it would not have been in her best interests to adduce it, nor would it be now. In those circumstances it is not either necessary or expedient in the interests of justice to admit the evidence.’

Judges:

Hughes LJ VP, Mackay J, lloyd Jones J

Citations:

[2010] EWCA Crim 914

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Criminal Appeal Act 1968 23

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedErskine, Regina v; Regina v Williams CACD 14-Jul-2009
The defendants had been separately convicted of murder several years ago. They sought the quashing of the convictions and substitution of convictions for manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility.
Held: The appeal of Erskine . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 18 August 2022; Ref: scu.414597

Regina v Ramchurn: CACD 2 Feb 2010

The defendant had planned and executed the killing of his wife’s lover, a cousin, having given him a home. He threatened that he would kill him, and prepared to do so, trying to get keys to gain access to the victim’s home, and when that failed arranging a meeting to carry out his plan, equipping himself with a rope ligature for the purpose. He disposed of the body some distance away and set up a false alibi. The evidence was that he was depressed. One doctor described his state as ‘an emotional turmoil’ and a ‘tortured frame of mind’, and expressed the opinion that ‘in the tumultuous final moments which resulted in the death’ the impairment of mental responsibility would have been substantial. The other agreed that there was an element of depression, and accepted that it had played some part in the killing. Carefully cross-examined, he agreed that the impact of the depression on the defendant’s mental responsibility was more than trivial, but he disagreed that it was substantial. The jury convicted of murder. The defendant appealed against his conviction for murder, saying that the judge’s directions had not followed the Judicial Studies Board specimen directions.
Held: The appeal failed. Specimen Directions were invaluable guidance but there was no obligation to use them unless and until they had been formally approved and adopted by the Court of Appeal.
The defendant argued about the judge’s directions on the eaning of ‘substantially; in the context of his impairment, saying that there were two inconsistent meanings of ‘substantially’ to be derived from Lloyd, that the judge had in consequence failed to give the jury a clear direction and moreover that the law was in too uncertain a state to satisfy the requirements of article 7 of the ECHR. Accordingly, it was contended, the conviction for murder was unsafe. Lord Judge CJ rejected his ‘two meanings’ argument: ‘It is, however, clear on analysis that in Lloyd the court rejected the submission that there were two meanings for the word ‘substantially’. In the judgment in Lloyd the word ‘substantially’ carried ‘some’ meaning or ‘a’ meaning. It was accepted in Lloyd that there were different ways of illustrating the same concept and, if necessary, explaining its relevance to the jury. If the court in Egan had intended to convey that the words ‘substantially impaired’ embraced two different concepts or levels of impairment, it would have said so not by citing Lloyd as authority in support, but by distinguishing Lloyd. In the result, just as the court in Lloyd could see no effective difference between the directions in Simcox and Lloyd, the Court of Appeal in Egan could see no difficulty in the deployment of either of the two methods of explanation found in Lloyd.’

Judges:

Lord Judge, Lord Chief Justice, Mr Justice Penry-Davey and Mr Justice Irwin

Citations:

[2010] EWCA Crim 194, Times 22-Feb-2010, [2010] 2 Cr App R 3

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Homicide Act 1957 2

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedGolds, Regina v CACD 2-May-2014
The defendant appealed against his conviction for murder, sayng that the jury had been wrongly directed as to the meaning of ‘substantial impairent when considering the alternative of manslaughter . .
CitedGolds, Regina v SC 30-Nov-2016
The defendant appealed against his conviction for murder, saying that he should have been only convicted of manslaughter, applying the new test for diminished responsibility as provided under the 1957 Act as amended, and particularly whether the . .
CitedBrennan v Regina CACD 21-Nov-2014
The defendant, then 22 had a history of disturbed childhood, sexual abuse and outpatient mental health treatment together with one instance when he was sectioned following a suicide attempt. On the undisputed psychiatric evidence he suffered from a . .
CitedGolds, Regina v SC 30-Nov-2016
The defendant appealed against his conviction for murder, saying that he should have been only convicted of manslaughter, applying the new test for diminished responsibility as provided under the 1957 Act as amended, and particularly whether the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 17 August 2022; Ref: scu.406839

Regina v Jamalov: CACD 8 Dec 2009

The defendant had been asked by a police officer to identify himself after an accident. He produced a Czech driving licence which he knew to be false, even though it gave his correct name.
Held: His appeal failed. The charge was not in misidentifying himself, but in producing an identity document which he knew to be false in order to establish a registerable fact.

Judges:

Lord Justice Hooper, Mr Justice Openshaw and Judge Nicholas Cooke, QC

Links:

Times

Statutes:

Identity Cards Act 2006 25(1) 25(2)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 17 August 2022; Ref: scu.407494

Raissi v Secretary of State for Justice: CA 31 Mar 2010

The claimant had been arrested and held on suspicion of terrorist offences. An application for his extradition to the US was refused, and the charges were dropped after the Court said that no evidence at all had been produced, and ‘there is a considerable body of evidence to suggest that the police and the CPS were responsible for serious defaults.’ He sought compensation under the voluntary scheme for his detention. The respondent had already been given a further 28 days to allow him to make some progress in responding to the application.
Held: The court granted the applicant his costs on an indemnity basis.

Judges:

Lord Clarke of Stone-cum-Ebony MR, Smith, Hooper LJJ

Citations:

[2010] EWCA Civ 337

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedSecretary of State for Justice v James HL 6-May-2009
The applicant had been sentenced to an indefinite term for public protection, but the determinate part of his sentence had passed with no consideration as to whether his continued detention was required.
Held: The post tariff detention was not . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Damages, Crime

Updated: 16 August 2022; Ref: scu.406679

Regina v Gray: CACD 30 Apr 2004

The court examined the authorities as to good chracter directions where a defendant had previous convictions. Rix LJ said: ‘In our judgment the authorities discussed above entitled us to state the following principles as applicable in this context:
(1) The primary rule is that a person of previous good character must be given a full direction covering both credibility and propensity. Where there are no further acts to complicate the position, such a direction is mandatory and should be unqualified (Vye, Aziz).
(2) If a defendant has a previous conviction which, either because of its age or nature, may entitle him to be treated as of effective good character, the trial judge has a discretion so to treat him, and if he does so the defendant is entitled to a Vye direction (passim); but
(3) Where the previous conviction can only be regarded as irrelevant or of no significance in relation to the offence charged, that discretion ought to be exercised in favour of treating the defendant as of good character (H, Durbin and, to the extent that it cited H with apparent approval, Aziz). In such a case the defendant is entitled to again entitled to a Vye direction. It would seem to be consistent with principle (4) below that, where there is room for uncertainty as to how a defendant of effective good character should be treated, a judge would be entitled to give an appropriately modified Vye direction.
(4) Where a defendant of previous good character, whether absolute or we would suggest, effective, has been shown at trial, whether by admission or otherwise, to be guilty or criminal conduct, the prima facie rule of practice is to deal with this by qualifying a Vye direction rather than by withholding it (Vye, Derbin, Aziz); but
(5) In such a case, there remains a narrowly circumscribed residual discretion to withhold a good character direction in whole, or presumably in part, where it would make no sense or would be meaningless or absurd or an insult to commonsense, to do otherwise (Zoppola-Barrazza and Dictor Derbin and Aziz)’

Judges:

Rix LJ

Citations:

[2004] EWCA Crim 1074, [2004] 2 Cr App R 30

Links:

Bailii

Citing:

CitedRegina v Vye etc CACD 7-Apr-1993
Detailed guidance was given on good character directions, as to how and when they should be given, but: ‘Provided that the judge indicates to the jury the two respects in which good character may be relevant, ie credibility and propensity, this . .
CitedRegina v Aziz; Regina v Tosun; Regina v Yorganci HL 16-Jun-1995
The defendant (one of three) relied upon his part exculpatory statement made in interview and did not give evidence. The judge said that his good character was relevant as to his own propensity, and the character of the others was relevant to their . .

Cited by:

CitedGAI v Regina CACD 5-Oct-2012
The defendant’s appeal based on the absence of a good character direction had succeeded. The court now gave its reasons.
Held: After reviewing the authorities, the appeal succeeded: ‘the learned judge was wrong to find that the fact that . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 16 August 2022; Ref: scu.406611