_JoHNnY_
Supreme Member
i was just wandering to be guilty of a crime do you only need to prove mens rea and actus reas, or do you need to prove both and causation.. or just causation on its own?
Are you sure about that?Jonathan A said:Not all crimes require Causation
Mens Rea is intention. Recklessness is enough to satisfy mens rea. Knowledge is a component of recklessness. At least when you are talking about sexual assault and murder.Mens Rea (Guilty mind)
-Intention (e.g. intent to kill or intent to punch)
-Recklessness - knew of a possibility but persisted
-Knowledge (e.g. knowledge of person not consenting to sexual intercourse)
melsc said:is absolute liability the same as strict liability???
Prove me wrong. Causation is a physical element. I could be wrong, but my understanding is that it is part of what is required depending on the offence we speak of.erawamai said:Are you sure about that?
melsc said:thanks just wanted to be sure
also were does negligence fit it, is it the mens rea or does it mitiagate mens rea???
How can you have no causation? the act of the person must have led to the crime. Unless, as you say, the crime is not based on an outcome that leads from an act.Jonathan A said:Prove me wrong. Causation is a physical element. I could be wrong, but my understanding is that it is part of what is required depending on the offence we speak of.
What about Status Offences? There is some form of causation in the regard you speak of, but that is splitting hairs. Is there an authority for that belief, e.g. Speeding caused by voluntary pushing the accelerator.erawamai said:How can you have no causation? the act of the person must have led to the crime. Unless, as you say, the crime is not based on an outcome that leads from an act.
...and yes I made a mistake. There is a slight difference between absolute and strict liability. However I think it would be wrong to suggest that a strict liability offence has some kind of mens rea element. Practically the difference is that the defence of honest and reasonable mistake is avaliable.
I did criminal law about a year and a half ago.Jonathan A said:Are you by any chance studying Practice and Procedure or something of the sort? (Generally where theory is critiqued).
Aimee05 said:Jonathan A, how come you originally said that strict liability and absolute liability were the same, and then you distinguished between them later? I'm confused. I thought strict liability was the one that required NO mens rea, as well - such as traffic offences.