News1 min ago
Should The 'joint Enterprise' Law, Now Be Changed?
51 Answers
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by anotheoldgit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Don't blame you for not finding it, aog, lol. Probably better discussing it here.
http:// m.thean swerban k.co.uk /Chatte rBank/Q uestion 1475459 .html
^Some thoughts to be going on with.
http://
^Some thoughts to be going on with.
Laws like this are seriously difficult to deal with.
This is a law that was introduced back in the days of duelling, when it was thought that duels would decrease in popularity, if seconds and doctors in attendance could be charged with murder, even though they were not directly responsible for a death.
Obviously each side has high emotions - the victims' families feel that the change is unjust, and will allow accomplices to be released, and the convicted prisoners' families will feel that denied justice is now available to their loved ones.
As I understand it, the appeal will have to show that the convicted accomplice was badly served by imposition of the law - it will not simply be a (literally!) Get-Out-Of-Jail-Free Card for everyone convicted under its application.
So, when the furore has died down, we will have to see how the law is applied, and it will be to each case on its merits.
This is a law that was introduced back in the days of duelling, when it was thought that duels would decrease in popularity, if seconds and doctors in attendance could be charged with murder, even though they were not directly responsible for a death.
Obviously each side has high emotions - the victims' families feel that the change is unjust, and will allow accomplices to be released, and the convicted prisoners' families will feel that denied justice is now available to their loved ones.
As I understand it, the appeal will have to show that the convicted accomplice was badly served by imposition of the law - it will not simply be a (literally!) Get-Out-Of-Jail-Free Card for everyone convicted under its application.
So, when the furore has died down, we will have to see how the law is applied, and it will be to each case on its merits.
EDDIE51 - //Many people have been convicted of murder under joint enterprise when it is pretty clear they should not have been. This is just one story seen from the victims viewpoint. //
Indeed There is a world of difference between egging on someone to stab someone to death, and simply standing ten feet away while a casual acquaintance behaves completely out of character and murders someone before the acquaintance even realises what is going on.
To sentence both equally is clearly poor application of the law.
Indeed There is a world of difference between egging on someone to stab someone to death, and simply standing ten feet away while a casual acquaintance behaves completely out of character and murders someone before the acquaintance even realises what is going on.
To sentence both equally is clearly poor application of the law.
mikey - //Irony and light-heartedness are notoriously difficult to suggest in print, here on AB.
A smiley face may have made Gromit's comments a little clearer perhaps ? //
Indeed - I usually add a 'LOL!' to make sure that I am not seen as offering offence - but even that is not guaranteed to work!!
A smiley face may have made Gromit's comments a little clearer perhaps ? //
Indeed - I usually add a 'LOL!' to make sure that I am not seen as offering offence - but even that is not guaranteed to work!!
-- answer removed --
it's not a parliamentary law, as far as I know, it derives from common law, but judges have been misapplying it. Now that the supreme court has pointed this out, it shouldn't happen any more.
A useful summary from one lawyer:
“The effect of the supreme court’s decision is that a member of a group cannot be found guilty of an offence unless there is proof that he or she positively intended that it should be committed. Mere foresight of what someone else might do is not enough.”
A useful summary from one lawyer:
“The effect of the supreme court’s decision is that a member of a group cannot be found guilty of an offence unless there is proof that he or she positively intended that it should be committed. Mere foresight of what someone else might do is not enough.”
sandyRoe - //The gangs of 'savages', who feature in many a post here in AB, may now go unpunished for their violent crimes.
The knifemen, if caught, will feel the full weight of the law but his accomplices will get off with little more than a slap on the wrist. //
And that is as it should be.
Being in a 'gang' - label unimportant - is not a crime. Stabbing someone with a knife is.
No-one should be jailed merely for being in the vicinity of a crime
The knifemen, if caught, will feel the full weight of the law but his accomplices will get off with little more than a slap on the wrist. //
And that is as it should be.
Being in a 'gang' - label unimportant - is not a crime. Stabbing someone with a knife is.
No-one should be jailed merely for being in the vicinity of a crime
sandyRoe, it seems likely that anyone with a knife may still be convicted as they could still be seen as having intended that a knifing take place. However, unarmed people may not, even if they were accompanying the knifemen. The courts will have to make up their mind according to the facts; but just "being there" will no longer be sufficient evidence.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.