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The Nature of Crime

The Nature of Crime. Criminal Law. Key Concepts. Crime Criminal Law Criminal Negligence Quasi- criminal laws Actus reus Mens rea Intent General intent Specific intent. Concepts 2. Motive Knowledge Recklessness Wilful blindness Regulatory Laws

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The Nature of Crime

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  1. The Nature of Crime Criminal Law

  2. Key Concepts • Crime • Criminal Law • Criminal Negligence • Quasi- criminal laws • Actus reus • Mens rea • Intent • General intent • Specific intent

  3. Concepts 2 • Motive • Knowledge • Recklessness • Wilful blindness • Regulatory Laws • Liability • Strict Liability Offense • Due diligence • Absolute Liability Offence

  4. Puzzle • There were two brothers, Willie and Billie. One of them always lied, and the other always told the truth. Unfortunately, we don’t know which was which. Read the story below about the bank robbery and then identify the robber, basing your identification on the information supplied.

  5. Story • Police Officer Clarkson saw two men run out of the rank at the corner of First and Maple. One was wearing a yellow cap and the other was wearing a green cap. Officer Clarkson couldn’t tell which of the men had robbed the bank. Fortunately, Willie saw the whole thing. He told the officer the colour of the hat the robber was wearing. Later that day, Billie told his sister Cameron who the robber was. “ Willie told me the robber was a wearing a yellow cap,” he said

  6. Answer • The robber was the man wearing the green cap. Suppose that Willie is the brother who always lies and Billie always tells the truth. In this case, Willie would have said the robber was wearing a yellow cap, and Billie would have reported this truthfully to his sister. But since Willie always lies, the cap must have been green. Now suppose that Billie is the liar. In this case, Willie would have reported truthfully that the robber was wearing green, but Billie would have changed the cap colour when telling his sister what Willie told him In either case, the answer is green

  7. Crime • A crime is any act or omission of an act that is prohibited and punishable by federal statute. • Omission of an act means that some crimes are not acts in the strict sense, but rather failure to act in certain situations.

  8. Possible Crime • Two students who know each other well are play fighting. When their teacher asks them to stop ,the students indicate that their actions are okay because they know each other and are just fooling around. Two days later, one of the students comes to the teacher because that “ friend “ from the other days has just given him a black eye.

  9. Questions for Discussion • What action, if any should be taken against the student(s)? • How is the teacher to know when the students are play fighting and when they are not? • If you were a teacher or authority figure ,how would you handle a situation in which students tell you that they do not mind inappropriate fighting, touching, or comments because the person responsible is their friend?

  10. Four Conditions MUST exist to consider an act or its omission as a crime • The act is considered wrong by the society. • The act causes harm to society in general or to those (such as minors) who need protection. ( To spank or not to Spank!) • The harm must be serious . • The remedy must be handled by the CJS ( criminal justice system).

  11. Defining a Criminal Law • http://www.youtube.ca/watch?v=d0SJ-GykaY8&feature=related Major Purposes • Protect People and Property • Maintain Order • Preserve Standards of public decency

  12. The Criminal Code • Federal statute that contains the majority of the criminal laws passed by the Parliament. • Lists offenses and sentences to be imposed and the procedures to follow when trying accused for the crimes (e.g. protecting children from sexual abuse bill C-7 exploring the background of people wishing to work with children( bona fide occupational) • Laws in Criminal code are added, revised and repealed to reflect the changing social values of the majority of Canadians.

  13. Federal and Provincial Prerogatives towards the Criminal Law • Section 91(27) of the Constitution Act,1867,granted the federal government the power to exercise legal authority to make criminal laws for Canada • The provinces have the power to pass laws on matters that fall under their jurisdiction (e.g. traffic laws, liquor regulations) • Provincial laws that prohibit the sale of tobacco to people under a certain age are considered quasi-criminal laws, and the usual punishment for them is paying a fine.

  14. CRIMINAL LAW • Is a public matter to do with issues that affect everyone e.g. theft, murder • It is used when specific laws have alleged to have been broken • The Crown (i.e. the Government) prosecutes on behalf of the public • The police are always involved • There are felonies(serious crime like theft) and misdemeanours(less serious crime like driving offences or public order e.g. drunk and disorderly) • The penalties are fines and/or imprisonment

  15. ENFORCING THE LAW:THE POLICE • The police do not make law, they enforce it • The police: • investigate crimes • gather the evidence • arrest suspects • bring suspects to court

  16. ENFORCING THE LAW:THE JUDGE • The judge makes sure the trial is conducted properly • The judge does not(except in special circumstances) decide whether someone is innocent or guilty • The judge imposes the sentence

  17. HOW CRIMINAL LAW WORKS • Less serious cases are heard in a Provincial Court ( quasi- criminal cases) • More serious cases are heard in a Supreme Court • In a Provincial Court the case is heard by either one full-time judge . • In the Supreme Court the case is heard by a judge and jury • The Supreme Court can impose much tougher sentences than the Provincial Court • The accused is presumed innocent until proved guilty

  18. ENFORCING THE LAW:THE JURY • The jury is made up of 12 adults chosen at random • The jury decides whether the accused is innocent or guilty • Juries only sit in the Supreme Court • The jury have all to agree on the verdict, although if they cannot agree the court will accept a majority of at least 10 to 2

  19. ENFORCING THE LAW:SENTENCES • Discharge: • absolute – let off • conditional – let off provided you behave for a set period • Fine: • Supreme Court – unlimited; Provincial Court – up to $5000; • Community sentence – includes: • work for community, curfew, exclusion order, reparation • Prison • up to full life for serial murder • Prison for over-21s • Young Offenders Institution 18 – 21 (in theory)

  20. ENFORCING THE LAW:SENTENCES Oh – and death – capital punishment has been abolished in Canada in 1976

  21. The Elements of a Crime • http://www.saskschools.ca/curr_content/law30/criminal/lesson6/6a.html • There are two things that have to be proven in a court of law before it will convict someone of a crime:the actus reus and the mens rea of an offence as set out in the Criminal code. • • Actus reus (prohibited act) - the guilty act or guilty omission. An act is doing something that you shouldn't and an omission is not doing something that you should have. • • Mens rea (criminal intent) - the guilty thought or mind. This is either having the intention to do something like murder or theft, or you can have the mind to be reckless.

  22. Elements of the Crime

  23. Specifics of Mens Rea

  24. Activities • 1. Identify which form of mens rea could have occurred for each situation. • 2. Explain in your notebooks which statements are true examples of men rea and why or why not. • The striking of one person by another, during a heated argument. • Breaking into a house with the intent to steal stereo equipment. • Causing of an accident by speeding and weaving from lane to lane in traffic. • Purchasing a stereo from a man in a pool hall at an unbelievably low price.

  25. Assignment ( Due ,May,10) • Locate articles in a newspaper, magazine, newspaper or online detailing the background of a crime. • Chose one crime article and prepare a one page write up describing the substantive elements of the crime. • Be sure to use a Canadian crime. • Suggested magazines include: • Law Now • Decisis • Just in Time

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