Sexual Offence Definitions Flashcards

1
Q

What must be proved in all cases of sexual violation?

A
  • That there was an intentional act by the offender involving sexual connection with the complainant, and;
  • The complainant did not consent to the sexual act, and;

- The offender did not believe the complainant was consenting, or;

  • If he did believe she was consenting, the grounds for such a belief were not reasonable.
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2
Q

Person

A

Proven by Judicial notice or circumstantial evidence.

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3
Q

Sexual violation defined

A

Section 128, Crimes Act 1961

(1) Sexual violation is the act of a person who -
(a) rapes another person; or
(b) has unlawful sexual connection with another person.

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4
Q

Rape

CA.61 S.128(2)

A

Person A rapes person B if person A has sexual connection with person B, effected by the penetration of person B’s genitalia by person A’s penis-

a) without person B’s consent to the connection; and
b) without believing on RG that person B consents to the connection.

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5
Q

Penetration

Section 2 (1A). CA 61

A

Introduction to the slightest degree is enough to effect a connection.

Proof of penetration may be established by the complainant’s evidence, medical examination, defendant’s admissions.

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6
Q

Sexual Connection

CA.61 S.2

A

a) connection effected by the introduction into the genitalia or anus of one person (otherwise than for genuine medical purposes) of
- a part of the body of another person
- an object manipulated by another person
b) connection between the mouth or tongue of one person and another person’s genitalia or anus
c) the continuation of connection in a kind described

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7
Q

Proof of penetration is required, 3 ways of proving:

A
  1. Complainant’s evidence
  2. Medical exam
  3. Accused’s admissions
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8
Q

Genitalia

A

R V KOROHEKE

The genetalia comprise the reproductive organs, interior and exterior … they include the vulva and labia, both interior and exterior at the opening of the vagina.

Penis S2 CA61:

Includes a surgically constructed or reconstructed organ analogous to naturally occurring male or female genitalia (whether the person concerned is male, female or of indeterminate sex).

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9
Q

Consent

A

A person’s conscious and voluntary agreement to something desired or proposed by another.

The Crown must prove:

  • That there was an intentional act by the offender involving sexual connection with the complainant, and;
  • The complainant did not consent to the sexual act (a subjective test), and;
  • The offender did not believe the complainant was consenting (a subjective test), or;
  • If he did believe she was consenting, the grounds for such a belief were not reasonable (an objective test).

R v COX

Consent must be full, voluntary, free and informed . . . freely and voluntarily given by a person in a position to form a rational judgement.

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10
Q

Another person

A

It is a gender neutral offence; given the wide statutory definition of genitalia, the person’s biological gender is not relevant.

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11
Q

Attempts

A

Section 72 CA 61

Having an intent to commit an offence, does or omits an act for the purpose of accomplishing his object.

They are guilty of an attempt to commit the offence intended, whether in the circumstances it was possible to commit the offence or not.

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12
Q

Eight Matters that Do Not Constitute Consent CA.61 S.128A

A
  • Lack of protest or resistence
  • Force, threat or fear of force
  • Asleep or unconscious
  • Affected by alcohol or drugs
  • Intellectual, mental or physical impairment
  • Mistake as to identity
  • Mistake as to nature and quality of act
  • Sexual activity to which S128A applies and indecent assault.
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13
Q

Unlawful Sexual Connection CA.61 S128(3)

A

Person A has unlawful sexual connection with person B if person A has sexual connection with person B:

a) without person B’s consent to the connection AND
b) without believing on reasonable grounds that B consents to the connection

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14
Q

Prove Age

A

R V FORREST AND FORREST

The best evidence possible in the circumstance should be adduced by the prosecution in proof of the victims age. In practice usually birth certificate and independent evidence that identifies victim as person named.

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15
Q

“Child” in relation to Crimes Act 1961

A

Person under 12 years.

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16
Q

Indecency

(R v Court)

A

R V COURT

Indecency means “conduct that right-thinking people will consider an affront to the sexual modesty of (the complainant)” Application: indecency

17
Q

“Young person” in relation to Crimes Act 1961

A

Person under 16 years.

18
Q

Indecent Assault

(R v Leeson)

A

R V Leeson

Indecent assault is an assault accompanied with circumstances of indecency.

19
Q

What must the prosecution prove for indecent assault

A
  • Intentionally assaulted victim
  • Circumstances were indecent
  • Complainant did not consent
  • Didn’t honestly believe the complainant was consenting
  • The defendant intended the conduct, that a reasonable person would find indecent if consent is an issue
20
Q

R v Koroheke

A

The genitalia comprise the reproductive organs, interior and exterior … they include the vulva (and) the labia, both interior and exterior, at the opening of the vagina

Application: genitalia

21
Q

R v Cox

(Lots and lots of Cox!)

A

Consent must be “full, voluntary, free and informed … freely and voluntarily given by a person in a position to form a rational judgment

Application: consent

22
Q

R v Gutuama

(Gutuama - Gucci - Gucci shoes - SHOES)

A

Under the objective test the Crown must prove that “no reasonable person in the accused’s shoes could have thought that the complainant was consenting”. Application: consent

23
Q

R v Forrest and Forrest

(Forest, trees, paper)

A

The best evidence possible in the circumstances should be adduced by the prosecution in proof of the victim’s age Application: proving age

24
Q

R v Court

(Court - tennis - A tennis coach holds his student’s bottom while she serves - says it helps with her serve)

(Application: indecency)

A

Indecency means “conduct that right-thinking people will consider an affront to the sexual modesty of (the complainant)” Application: indecency

25
Q

R v Dunn

(‘Dunn’ in light of the time, place and circumstances - and it didn’t involve trifle)

A

Indecency must be judged in light of the time, place and circumstances. It must be something more than trifling, and be sufficient to “warrant the sanction of the law” Application: indecency

26
Q

R v Leeson

(Rhymes with Neeson - “I will find you. And I will kill you. For doing an indecent act on me.”)

A

The definition of ‘indecent assault’ “… is an assault accompanied with circumstances of indecency … Application: indecent assault

27
Q

R v Norris

(Who would be brave enough to convict Chuck Norris of indecent assault?)

A

If a person who is charged with indecent assault is able to establish that they honestly believed that the complainant was consenting, they are entitled to be acquitted even though the grounds of his belief were unreasonable

Application: indecent assault: defence

28
Q

Penis

A

Includes a surgically constructed or reconstructed organ analogous to a naturally occurring penis (whether the person concerned is male, female or of indeterminate sex).

29
Q

No presumption because of age

A

There is no presumption of law that a person is incapable of sexual connection because of his or her age.

30
Q

Reluctant consent

A

R v Herbert - The court held that a true consent may be given reluctantly or hesitantly and may be regretted afterwards, but if the consent is given even in such a manner, provided it is without fear of the application of force or the result of actual or threatened force, then the act of sexual connection would not be rape.

31
Q

Describe the subjective and objective test regarding consent

A

The subjective test - absence of consent

What was the complainant thinking at the time? - The Crown must prove that the complainant was not consenting to the sexual act at the time it occurred - it is not for the defendant to prove that she was consenting.

The objective test - reasonable grounds for belief in consent

The objective test is: what would a reasonable person have believed if placed in the same position as the defendant?

***

R v Gutuama - Under the objective test the Crown must prove that “no reasonable person in the accused’s shoes could have thought that the complainant was consenting.”