Intoxication Flashcards

mental capacity defence

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1
Q

When can intoxication be used as a defence?

A

when the D has taken drug, alcohol or other substances that have substantially impacted his/her judgement

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2
Q

Why is intoxication a defence?

A

Allows D to establish that he/she didn’t have the mental capacity for the offence which they have been charged with

They were so drunk that D was unable to form the MR of the offence

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3
Q

what does the defence depend on?

A

whether the crime was one of basic or specific intent

whether the intoxication was voluntary or involuntary

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4
Q

voluntary intoxication

A

Where the D has chosen to take the intoxicating substance(s)
OR
knows the effect of taking a prescribed drug will make them intoxicated

DPP V beard - set out rule that if D was so drunk that he was incapable for the intent required, he cannot be convicted of a specific intent crime

Voluntary intoxication = NEVER a defence for a BASIC INTENT CRIME
(becoming voluntarily intoxicated is reckless so can form part of the MR which include recklessness)
- Majewski rule

D will be convicted of a lesser basic intent equivalent if specific intent crime was committed
- R V sheean and moore

Drunken intent is still intent - AG’s V Gallagher

intoxication can still be voluntary even if the D didn’t know the effect of the drug - R V Allen

If a substance causes unexpected effects, may be able to rely on the defence - R V Hardie

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5
Q

DDP v beard

A

D raped 13-yr old girl whilst intoxicated, put hand over her mouth to stop her from screaming, she died of suffocation
(still G of sexual assault)
D didn’t have MR for murder as was too intoxicated

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6
Q

Majewski

A

intoxicated D attacked landlord of pub and police officers, damaged the pub and the police station = all offences were basic intent

claimed he had no memory - court held intoxication is a reckless course of conduct - recklessness was enough for the MR of these offences

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7
Q

R V Sheehan and Moore

A

D will be convicted of a lesser basic intent equivalent if specific intent crime was committed

Conviction was reduced to manslaughter - D threw petrol over homeless and set him on fire

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8
Q

Gallagher

A

Drunken intent is still intent

D decised to kill wife, drank for “dutch courage” - MR prior to the intoxication = no defence

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9
Q

Allen

A

D charged with burglary after evening at the pub and some wine given to him by a friend - still voluntary, didn’t make the intoxication involuntary

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10
Q

Involuntary intoxication

A

where D doesn’t know they have taken an intoxicating substance (e.g. spiked)
OR
consumes an intoxication substance under medical advice (e.g. a sedative)

If D voluntarily takes a non-dangerous drug, doesn’t have to be prescribed, may be able to rely if drug causes unexpected effects
- R V hardie

If D already has MR = No defence
- R V Kingston

Where D has no MR = cannot be guilty of basic or specific intent crime (because D HASN’T been reckless in getting intoxicated)
- R V Lipman

D cannot rely on self-defence when state of fact has been induced by intoxication - O’Grady

a drunken mistake about the amount of force appliped in self defence was not a defence - R V hatton
EXCEPTION:
Jaggard V Dickinson -

Criminal Justice and Immigration Act - D cannot rely on any mistake attributable to intoxication that was voluntarily induced

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11
Q

R v Hardie

A

If D voluntarily takes a non-dangerous drug, doesn’t have to be prescribed, may be able to rely if drug causes unexpected effects

D took several pills to calm his nerves, set fire to house but remembered nothing - conviction quashed as drug took unexpected effects

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12
Q

R V Kinston

A

If D already has MR = No defence

D had pedophile tendencies, invited to house where he was spiked, D was photographed by the blackmailer abusing 15yr old drugged and unconscious boy - D had formed the MR before

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13
Q

R V Lipman

A

Where D has no MR = cannot be guilty of basic or specific intent crime (because D HASN’T been reckless in getting intoxicated)

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14
Q

R V O’Grady

A

D and V had been heavily drinking - D claimed he woke up in night to find the V hitting him, D hit V with ashtray, went to sleep, V found dead in morning - couldnt rely on mistake induced by intoxication

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15
Q

R V Hatton

A

D and V went back to flat after drinking - found V killed by sledgehammer, D couldn’t remember but had said that he had been hit by V with 5ft stick and that he’d defended himself - mistake about the amount of force required in SD is not defence

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16
Q

Jaggard V Dickinson

A

EXCEPTION to Hatton
D lost without money or lift home after night out, belived friend would consent to her breaking in but house didn’t actually belong to the friend