Regina v Shepherd: CACD 2 Jan 1987

The court considered the direction to be given on a defence of duress: ‘ . . .. where a person has voluntarily, and with knowledge of its nature, joined a criminal organisation or gang which he knew might bring pressure on him to commit an offence and was an active member when he was put under such pressure, he cannot avail himself of the defence of duress.’ The jury should have been (but were not) directed to consider ‘whether the appellant could be said to have taken the risk of P’s violence simply by joining a shoplifting gang of which he [P] was a member’.

Judges:

Lord Lane CJ, Farquharson and Gatehouse JJ

Citations:

(1987) 86 Cr App R 47

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

ApprovedRegina v Sharpe 1987
A member of a gang of robbers sought to establish a defence of duress. The trial judge had directed the jury ‘but in my judgment the defence of duress is not available to an accused who voluntarily exposes and submits himself to illegal compulsion . . .

Cited by:

CitedHasan, Regina v HL 17-Mar-2005
The House was asked two questions: the meaning of ‘confession’ for the purposes of section 76(1) of the 1984 Act, and as to the defence of duress. The defendant had been involved in burglary, being told his family would be harmed if he refused. The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 06 May 2022; Ref: scu.223669