AOS3 - Factors for sentencing Flashcards

1
Q

Aggravating factors

A
  • Facts or circumstances about the offender or an offence that can increase the offenders culpability and lead to a more severe sanction
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2
Q

Mitigating factors

A
  • Facts or circumstances about the offender or an offence that can decrease the offenders culpability and lead to a reduction in sentence
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3
Q

Guilty pleas

A
  • A guilty plea occurs when a person admits that they committed an offence for which they have been charged
  • If there are multiple charges, the offender may choose to plead guilty to some or all of them
  • If an accused pleads guilty during pre-trial (committals) then a trial will not be conducted
  • If an accused pleads guilty during the trial and the plea is accepted, then the accused will proceed to sentencing and the trial is adjourned
  • The earlier the guilty plea, the more lenient the sanction will be as the offender is being rewarded for accepting responsibility and saving judicial resources (sentencing discount)
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4
Q

Examples of aggravating factors

A
  • whether the crime was planned or premeditated
    • hate crimes resulting from prejudice towards a particular group based on ethnicity or religion
    • the degree of brutality and cruelty
    • the offence was unprovoked or involved domestic violence
    • the victim was a particularly vulnerable person e.g. a child, the elderly or a person with disability
    • the offender had prior convictions
    • the offence took place whilst the offender was on bail or serving their CCO
    • the crime was committed in front of children
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5
Q

Examples of mitigating factors

A
  • genuine remorse
    • the crime is a result of provocation
    • the age of the offender (a young offender is less mature but more capable of rehabilitation)
    • traumatic personal history, such as growing up surrounded by family violence, drug addiction, alcoholism
    • limited or no prior criminal history
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6
Q

Victim impact statements

A
  • An account written by people directly (victim) and indirectly (friends/family) impacted by the offence
  • This account provides insight into the physical, emotional and economic effects of the offence
  • The statement can inform the judge’s decision and impact the severity of sentencing
    • If VIS indicates severe impact on the victim, the sentence will increase
    • If VIS indicates that the victim has forgiven the offender, the sentence will decrease
  • Whilst the victim has the right to provide the court with a victim impact statement, the statement is given voluntarily
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