Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act to make for England and Wales (and for courts-martial wherever sitting) amendments of the law relating to homicide and the trial and punishment of murder, and for Scotland amendments of the law relating to the trial and punishment of murder and attempts to murder. |
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Citation | 5 & 6 Eliz. 2. c. 11 |
Dates | |
Royal assent | 21 March 1957 |
Commencement | 21 March 1957 [1] |
Status: Amended | |
Text of the Homicide Act 1957 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk. |
The Homicide Act 1957 (5 & 6 Eliz. 2. c. 11) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It was enacted as a partial reform of the common law offence of murder in English law by abolishing the doctrine of constructive malice (except in limited circumstances), reforming the partial defence of provocation, and by introducing the partial defences of diminished responsibility and suicide pact. It restricted the use of the death penalty for murder.
Similar provisions to Part I of this Act was enacted for Northern Ireland by Part II of the Criminal Justice Act (Northern Ireland) 1966.
The Act was introduced following the Royal Commission on Capital Punishment 1949–53, and embodied some of its recommendations but differed from the main recommendation which was that "it is impracticable to find a satisfactory method of limiting the scope of capital punishment by dividing murder into degrees". [2] During and after the royal commission there had been several controversial cases, including that of Derek Bentley in 1953 where a 19-year-old defendant was hanged for a murder committed by his 16-year-old co-defendant. (Bentley's conviction was found to be unsafe by the Court of Appeal in 1998) [3] The hanging of Ruth Ellis in 1955 had also caused considerable unease with the system of capital punishment; Ellis had a strong potential defence of diminished responsibility due to previous, but not immediate, abuse by her victim, but as the law did not provide for such a defence to a charge of murder she was sentenced to death. [4]
In November 1955, after Home Secretary Gwilym Lloyd George announced the government's rejection of some of the Royal Commission's proposals, veteran MP Sydney Silverman introduced a Bill to abolish capital punishment. The Conservative government avoided a vote on it (which would have shown Conservative MPs to be divided), [5] but a debate was held in February 1956 on a government motion and resulted in an abolitionist amendment being carried by 293 to 262. [6] Silverman's Bill was then passed by the Commons but vetoed by the House of Lords.
In order to mollify the abolitionists, the government then announced it would bring in a reform to the law to curtail the use of capital punishment.
This Part does not extend to Scotland. [7]
Constructive malice was the doctrine that malice aforethought, the mental element for murder, could be attributed to the defendant if death was caused during the commission of another felony (such as robbery or burglary). Section 1 of the Act abolished constructive malice except where the intention implicit in the other crime was an intention to kill or to do grievous bodily harm. Thus, the automatic linkage between the other crime and the murder was broken, and juries were then required to consider more directly whether the accused was culpable when engaging in the conduct resulting in death. But this made the Act unclear in its effect. Although the marginal note to the section purports to abolish the doctrine of "constructive malice", it did not abolish the concept of felony, the rules relating to the arrest of felons or the general rules specifying the test for the mental element which the juries were to apply. Hence, the Act did not abolish the principles of expressed malice or implied malice, i.e. malice could be implied by the words and expressions used by the accused, or there was a set of circumstances from which malice could be implied. These were objective tests that enabled the court to impute or "construct" the malice. This continuing common law was the basis of the decision in DPP v Smith [8] where the Lords confirmed that neither expressed nor implied malice had been repealed by the section. [9] It was not until the Criminal Law Act 1967 abolished the distinction between felonies and misdemeanours that the old common law rules on malice for the proof of mens rea in felonies could no longer apply.
The Act created two partial defences—diminished responsibility and suicide pact—to murder which, if satisfied, reduce a charge of murder to a charge of manslaughter. It also changed the law of another partial defence to murder provocation.
In 1953 the Report of the Royal Commission on Capital Punishment [10] took the view that mental abnormality which resulted in a diminished responsibility, was relatively common and potentially of importance to a wide range of offences. The Commission therefore asserted that a "radical" amendment to the existing law would not be justified for the "limited" purpose of enabling the courts to avoid imposing the death sentence. Parliament was not impressed and section 2 of the Act now provides that diminished responsibility is available as a defence where the accused was, at the time of the offence, suffering from an "abnormality of the mind" which substantially impaired his mental responsibility for his acts or omissions resulting in murder. The burden of proof is on the accused to show that she/he was suffering from diminished responsibility.
This defence is distinguishable from the defence of insanity for while the former requires a substantial impairment of mental responsibility arising from an abnormality of the mind, the latter requires a defect of reason arising from a disease of the mind. Broadly, the difference is that diminished responsibility is characterised by a temporary emotional or mental state which causes the accused to lose control over whether and how to act, whereas insanity is any inherent (internal) defect which so radically affects the defendant that he or she does not understand what is being done or that it is legally wrong to do it (other conditions may cause the accused to become an automaton, i.e. to be unable to control her/his body's movements, see automatism and its case law). A further distinction is that the defence of diminished responsibility reduces a murder charge to voluntary manslaughter, whereas the defence of insanity excuses the accused of all guilt (but may require the accused to be placed in special care, say, by imposing a hospital order under section 37 of the Mental Health Act 1983, and automatism results in a complete acquittal.
An abnormality of the mind is a "state of mind so different from that of ordinary human beings that the reasonable man would term it abnormal". [11] This can arise from a mental incapacity to reason properly or from an inability to exercise willpower to control physical acts. Examples of an abnormality of the mind included:
Intoxication may not constitute an abnormality of the mind unless the craving for alcohol has become involuntary (R v Tandy [1989]). The Coroners and Justice Act [2009] s52(1) amended the Homicide Act 1957 to use the phrase "abnormal mental functioning" instead of "abnormal mind" to highlight the psychological focus of this defence.
There must be a "substantial" impairment of mental responsibility. Whether the impairment is "substantial" is defined either according to a common-sense standard or as "more than some trivial degree of impairment but less than total impairment" (R v Lloyd [1967]).
Provocation can be distinguished from diminished responsibility which recognises a reduction in culpability because the defendant does not have the capacity to choose whether to break the law or not. The defence of provocation was based on the argument that a person who was so provoked as to completely lose their self-control should not be punished in the same way as those who murder wilfully. The defence was available under common law where the accused was provoked to lose his self-control. Provocation could be caused by things done or things the accused heard or said himself. The jury then decided whether the provocation would have been sufficient to cause a reasonable man to lose his self-control. If so, the charge could be reduced from murder to voluntary manslaughter. The accused needed adduce only prima facie evidence of provocation. It was then up to the prosecution to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the accused was not provoked. Two conditions had to be satisfied:
It was thus possible for a person to have been subjectively provoked but not objectively provoked (e.g. a particularly sensitive person) or to have been objectively provoked but not subjectively provoked (e.g. a particular insensitive person). It was also possible for the provocation to have been built up over a period of time, provided that the outburst was sudden and temporary (R v Ahluwalia [1992]).
Section 3 of the Act made "the question whether the provocation was enough to make a reasonable man do as he did" the jury's responsibility. Previously this decision could be withdrawn from the jury by the judge.
In 2004 the Law Commission recommended substantial revision to this defence in their report on Partial Defences to Murder. [12] Section 3 was repealed on 4 October 2010 by section 56(2)(a) of the Coroners and Justice Act 2009. [13]
Parliament's intention in section 4 was to show some compassion for those who had been involved in a suicide pact but failed to die. The reason for the failure might be that the means adopted proved inadequate or the survivor's commitment was fragile. In either event, the trauma of involvement in such a pact was considered equivalent to a punishment and the mandatory life sentence of murder was considered an inappropriate sentence for such defendants. Thus the Act provides that where the accused kills a person, or is party to a person being killed, while acting in accordance with a suicide pact, the charge will be reduced from murder to manslaughter. A 'suicide pact' is a common agreement between two or more persons providing for the death of all those persons (whether they should take their own lives or those of each other). It is a requirement of the defence that the accused herself/himself had a "settled intention of dying in pursuance of the pact". This is to avoid the accused entering into a supposed pact with the real intention of committing murder. The burden is on the accused to prove that she/he:
Until the Homicide Act was passed, the mandatory penalty for all adults convicted of murder was death by hanging. After decades of campaigning, abolitionists secured a partial victory with the Act, which limited the circumstances in which murderers could be executed, requiring mandatory life imprisonment in all other cases.
This section created a new offence of capital murder. A person was guilty of this offence if he committed murder in one of five situations:
Forms of indictment for this offence were provided by S.I. 1957/699.
This section required the death penalty for anyone convicted of two murders. There were two subsections:
The wording of the death sentence was changed to "shall suffer death in the manner authorised by law" from "shall suffer death by hanging." [prior to 1948 the sentence read "shall be hanged by the neck until you are dead."]
All other murders were to be punished with mandatory life imprisonment.
There were 75 convictions for capital murder under the Act, 66 in England and Wales and nine in Scotland. Five were of people under the age of 18; six of the convictions were reduced either to non-capital murder or manslaughter on appeal, leaving 64 who were liable to be hanged. Of these, 32 (including the only woman) were recommended to mercy and were reprieved from the gallows. The other 32 men – 29 in England and Wales and three in Scotland – were hanged.
While the death penalty was originally still available under the subsequent Murder (Abolition of Death Penalty) Act 1965, which replaced the Homicide Act 1957, the last executions in the United Kingdom were carried out on 13 August 1964, when Peter Allen and Gwynne Evans were hanged for murdering John Alan West during a theft four months earlier, a death penalty crime under the 1957 Act. [14]
Date | Defendant | Court | Section | Outcome | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
16 May 1957 | Dunbar, Ronald Patrick | Newcastle upon Tyne Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reduced to manslaughter on appeal | [15] |
23 May 1957 | Vickers, John Wilson | Cumberland Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [16] |
28 June 1957 | McPherson, Franklin Rupert | Nottingham Assizes | 5 (1) (b) | reduced to manslaughter on appeal | [17] |
18 October 1957 | Howard, Dennis | Worcester Assizes | 5 (1) (a) and (b) | hanged | [18] |
19 December 1957 | Spriggs, John Francis | Birmingham Assizes | 5 (1) (b) | reprieved | [19] |
30 January 1958 | Matheson, Albert Edward | Durham Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reduced to manslaughter on appeal | [20] |
18 March 1958 | Teed, Vivian Frederick | Cardiff Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [21] |
29 March 1958 | Wilson, Mary Elizabeth | Leeds Assizes | 6 (2) | reprieved | [22] |
30 April 1958 | Bosworth, Arthur John | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) and (c) | reprieved | [23] |
22 May 1958 | Collier, George William | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [24] |
3 July 1958 | Kavanagh, Matthew | Warwick Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [25] |
23 July 1958 | Stokes, Frank | Leeds Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [26] |
20 October 1958 | Chandler, Brian | Durham Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [27] |
10 December 1958 | Jones, Ernest Raymond | Leeds Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [28] |
4 March 1959 | Chrimes, Joseph | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [29] |
19 March 1959 | Marwood, Ronald Henry | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (d) | hanged | [30] |
23 March 1959 | Tatum, Michael George | Hampshire Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [31] |
13 April 1959 | Di Duca, David Lancelot | Hampshire Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [32] |
1 July 1959 | Walden, Bernard Hugh | Sheffield Assizes | 5 (1) (b) | hanged | [33] |
24 September 1959 | Podola, Guenther Fritz Erwin | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (b), (c) and (d) | hanged | [34] |
7 April 1960 | Smith, Jim | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (d) | reduced to manslaughter on appeal; conviction restored by the House of Lords; reprieved | [35] |
1 June 1960 | Pocze, Mihaly | Lancaster Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [36] |
22 July 1960 | Constantine, John Louis | Birmingham Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [37] |
26 September 1960 | Harris, Norman James | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [38] |
26 September 1960 | Forsyth, Francis Robert George | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [38] |
26 September 1960 | Lutt, Terence | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) | detained at HM pleasure (aged 17) | [38] |
20 October 1960 | Rogers, John | Somerset Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [39] |
18 November 1960 | Gnypiuk, Wasyl | Nottingham Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [40] |
12 December 1960 | Riley, George | Stafford Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [41] |
20 January 1961 | Day, Jack | Bedford Assizes | 5 (1) (b) | hanged | [42] |
20 March 1961 | Duffy, Christopher John | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) | detained at HM pleasure (aged 16) | [43] |
28 March 1961 | Terry, Victor John | Sussex Assizes | 5 (1) (a) and (b) | hanged | [44] |
26 April 1961 | Pankotai, Zsiga | Leeds Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [45] |
1 May 1961 | Singleton, Sidney | Manchester Crown Court | 5 (1) (a) | detained at HM pleasure (aged 17) | [46] |
12 May 1961 | Bush, Edwin Albert Arthur | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [47] |
4 July 1961 | Porritt, George Anthony | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (b) | reduced to manslaughter on appeal | [48] |
20 July 1961 | Niemasz, Hendryk | Lewes Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [49] |
1 November 1961 | McMenemy, John Christopher | Liverpool Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [50] |
17 February 1962 | Hanratty, James | Bedford Assizes | 5 (1) (b) | hanged | [51] |
20 July 1962 | McCrorey, Bernard Joseph | Manchester Crown Court | 5 (1) (a) | reduced to manslaughter on appeal | [52] |
12 October 1962 | Grey, Oswald Augustus | Birmingham Assizes | 5 (1) (a) and (b) | hanged | [53] |
18 October 1962 | Smith, James | Liverpool Crown Court | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [54] |
12 March 1963 | Thatcher, George Frederick | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) and (b) | reduced to non-capital murder on appeal | [55] |
7 October 1963 | Black, Edgar Valentine | Glamorgan Assizes | 5 (1) (b) | reprieved | [56] |
2 November 1963 | Pascoe, Russell | Cornwall Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [57] |
2 November 1963 | Whitty, Dennis John | Cornwall Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [57] |
6 February 1964 | Simcox, Christopher | Stafford Assizes | 5 (1) (b) and 6 (1) | reprieved | [58] |
1 May 1964 | Masters, Joseph William | Lancaster Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [59] |
26 June 1964 | Dobbing, William Joseph | Leeds Assizes | 5 (1) (b) | reprieved | [60] |
7 July 1964 | Allen, Peter Anthony | Manchester Crown Court | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [61] |
7 July 1964 | Evans, Gwynne Owen | Manchester Crown Court | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [61] |
14 December 1964 | Cooper, Ronald John | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (b) | reprieved | [62] |
17 December 1964 | Dunford, Peter Anthony | Leeds Assizes | 6 (1) | reprieved | [63] |
8 February 1965 | Lawrence, Joseph | Stafford Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [64] |
22 March 1965 | Dunning, William Roger | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [65] |
22 March 1965 | Simpson, John Cummins | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [65] |
22 March 1965 | Odam, Michael William | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [65] |
26 March 1965 | Pockett, Frank Gordon | Birmingham Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [66] |
30 March 1965 | Latham, Richard Terence | Leeds Assizes | 5 (1) (b) | reprieved | [67] |
7 April 1965 | Stoneley, John William | Winchester Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [68] |
26 July 1965 | Williams, Frederick | Worcester Assizes | 5 (1) (b) | reprieved | [69] |
27 July 1965 | Burgess, Henry Francis | Central Criminal Court | 5 (1) (b) | reprieved | [70] |
27 October 1965 | Wardley, David Henry | Stafford Assizes | 5 (1) (d) | reprieved | [71] |
1 November 1965 | Chapman, David Stephen | Leeds Assizes | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [72] |
Date | Accused | Court | Section | Outcome | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
29 May 1958 | Manuel, Peter Thomas Anthony | High Court at Glasgow | 5 (1) (b) and 6 (2) | hanged | [73] |
25 September 1958 | Forbes, Donald Ferguson | High Court at Edinburgh | 5 (1) (a) | reprieved | [74] |
7 July 1959 | McGilvray, John | High Court at Glasgow | 5 (1) (a) | detained at HM pleasure (aged 17) | [75] |
9 March 1960 | Stirling, Alexander Main | High Court at Edinburgh | 5 (1) (b) and 6 (2) | reprieved | [76] |
16 November 1960 | Miller, Anthony Joseph | High Court at Glasgow | 5 (1) (a) | hanged | [77] |
30 November 1960 | Dickson, Robert McKenna Cribbes | High Court at Dumfries | 5 (1) (b) | reprieved | [78] |
8 May 1962 | Rodger, William | High Court at Glasgow | 5 (1) (a) | detained at HM pleasure (aged 17) | [79] |
25 July 1963 | Burnett, Henry John | High Court at Aberdeen | 5 (1) (b) | hanged | [80] |
20 February 1964 | McCarron, Patrick | High Court at Perth | 5 (1) (b) | reprieved | [81] |
The death penalty for murder was suspended for five years in 1965, and permanently abolished in 1969 (although it still remained for treason until 1998). The penalty today is life imprisonment under the Murder (Abolition of Death Penalty) Act 1965.
The insanity defense, also known as the mental disorder defense, is an affirmative defense by excuse in a criminal case, arguing that the defendant is not responsible for their actions due to a psychiatric disease at the time of the criminal act. This is contrasted with an excuse of provocation, in which the defendant is responsible, but the responsibility is lessened due to a temporary mental state. It is also contrasted with the justification of self defense or with the mitigation of imperfect self-defense. The insanity defense is also contrasted with a finding that a defendant cannot stand trial in a criminal case because a mental disease prevents them from effectively assisting counsel, from a civil finding in trusts and estates where a will is nullified because it was made when a mental disorder prevented a testator from recognizing the natural objects of their bounty, and from involuntary civil commitment to a mental institution, when anyone is found to be gravely disabled or to be a danger to themself or to others.
Murder is the unlawful killing of another human without justification or valid excuse committed with the necessary intention as defined by the law in a specific jurisdiction. This state of mind may, depending upon the jurisdiction, distinguish murder from other forms of unlawful homicide, such as manslaughter. Manslaughter is killing committed in the absence of malice, such as in the case of voluntary manslaughter brought about by reasonable provocation, or diminished capacity. Involuntary manslaughter, where it is recognized, is a killing that lacks all but the most attenuated guilty intent, recklessness.
The gay panic defense or homosexual advance defence is a strategy of legal defense, which refers to a situation in which a heterosexual individual charged with a violent crime against a homosexual individual claims they lost control and reacted violently because of an unwanted sexual advance that was made upon them. A defendant will use available legal defenses against assault and murder, with the aim of seeking an acquittal, a mitigated sentence, or a conviction of a lesser offense. A defendant may allege to have found the same-sex sexual advances so offensive or frightening that they were provoked into reacting, were acting in self-defense, were of diminished capacity, or were temporarily insane, and that this circumstance is exculpatory or mitigating.
A crime of passion, in popular usage, refers to a violent crime, especially homicide, in which the perpetrator commits the act against someone because of sudden strong impulse such as anger or jealousy rather than as a premeditated crime. A high level of social and legal acceptance of crimes of passion has been historically associated with France from the 19th century to the 1970s, and until recently with Latin America.
In law, provocation is when a person is considered to have committed a criminal act partly because of a preceding set of events that might cause a reasonable individual to lose self control. This makes them less morally culpable than if the act was premeditated (pre-planned) and done out of pure malice. It "affects the quality of the actor's state of mind as an indicator of moral blameworthiness."
In criminal law, diminished responsibility is a potential defense by excuse by which defendants argue that although they broke the law, they should not be held fully criminally liable for doing so, as their mental functions were "diminished" or impaired.
Battered woman syndrome (BWS) is a pattern of signs and symptoms displayed by a woman who has suffered persistent intimate partner violence—psychological, physical, or sexual—from her male partner. It is classified in the ICD-9 as battered person syndrome, but is not in the DSM-5. It may be diagnosed as a subcategory of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Victims may exhibit a range of behaviors, including self-isolation, suicidal thoughts, and substance abuse, and signs of physical injury or illness, such as bruises, broken bones, or chronic fatigue.
Capital murder refers to a category of murder in some parts of the US for which the perpetrator is eligible for the death penalty. In its original sense, capital murder was a statutory offence of aggravated murder in Great Britain, Northern Ireland, and the Republic of Ireland, which was later adopted as a legal provision to define certain forms of aggravated murder in the United States. Some jurisdictions that provide for death as a possible punishment for murder, such as California, do not have a specific statute creating or defining a crime known as capital murder; instead, death is one of the possible sentences for certain kinds of murder. In these cases, "capital murder" is not a phrase used in the legal system but may still be used by others such as the media.
Malice aforethought is the "premeditation" or "predetermination" required as an element of some crimes in some jurisdictions and a unique element for first-degree or aggravated murder in a few. Insofar as the term is still in use, it has a technical meaning that has changed substantially over time.
Murder is an offence under the common law legal system of England and Wales. It is considered the most serious form of homicide, in which one person kills another with the intention to unlawfully cause either death or serious injury. The element of intentionality was originally termed malice aforethought, although it required neither malice nor premeditation. Baker, chapter 14 states that many killings done with a high degree of subjective recklessness were treated as murder from the 12th century right through until the 1974 decision in DPP v Hyam.
In English law, provocation was a mitigatory defence to murder which had taken many guises over generations many of which had been strongly disapproved and modified. In closing decades, in widely upheld form, it amounted to proving a reasonable total loss of control as a response to another's objectively provocative conduct sufficient to convert what would otherwise have been murder into manslaughter. It only applied to murder. It was abolished on 4 October 2010 by section 56(1) of the Coroners and Justice Act 2009, but thereby replaced by the superseding—and more precisely worded—loss of control defence.
In English law, diminished responsibility is one of the partial defenses that reduce the offense from murder to manslaughter if successful. This allows the judge sentencing discretion, e.g. to impose a hospital order under section 37 of the Mental Health Act 1983 to ensure treatment rather than punishment in appropriate cases. Thus, when the actus reus of death is accompanied by an objective or constructive version of mens rea, the subjective evidence that the defendant did intend to kill or cause grievous bodily harm because of a mental incapacity will partially excuse his conduct. Under s.2(2) of the Homicide Act 1957 the burden of proof is on the defendant to the balance of probabilities. The M'Naghten Rules lack a volitional limb of "irresistible impulse"; diminished responsibility is the volitional mental condition defense in English criminal law.
In the English law of homicide, manslaughter is a less serious offence than murder, the differential being between levels of fault based on the mens rea or by reason of a partial defence. In England and Wales, a common practice is to prefer a charge of murder, with the judge or defence able to introduce manslaughter as an option. The jury then decides whether the defendant is guilty or not guilty of either murder or manslaughter. On conviction for manslaughter, sentencing is at the judge's discretion, whereas a sentence of life imprisonment is mandatory on conviction for murder. Manslaughter may be either voluntary or involuntary, depending on whether the accused has the required mens rea for murder.
Manslaughter is a common law legal term for homicide considered by law as less culpable than murder. The distinction between murder and manslaughter is sometimes said to have first been made by the ancient Athenian lawmaker Draco in the 7th century BC.
Although the legal system of Singapore is a common law system, the criminal law of Singapore is largely statutory in nature and historically derives largely from the Indian penal code. The general principles of criminal law, as well as the elements and penalties of general criminal offences such as assault, criminal intimidation, mischief, grievous hurt, theft, extortion, sex crimes and cheating, are set out in the Singaporean Penal Code. Other serious offences are created by statutes such as the Arms Offences Act, Kidnapping Act, Misuse of Drugs Act and Vandalism Act.
English law contains homicide offences – those acts involving the death of another person. For a crime to be considered homicide, it must take place after the victim's legally recognised birth, and before their legal death. There is also the usually uncontroversial requirement that the victim be under the "King's peace". The death must be causally linked to the actions of the defendant. Since the abolition of the year and a day rule, there is no maximum time period between any act being committed and the victim's death, so long as the former caused the latter.
South African criminal law is the body of national law relating to crime in South Africa. In the definition of Van der Walt et al., a crime is "conduct which common or statute law prohibits and expressly or impliedly subjects to punishment remissible by the state alone and which the offender cannot avoid by his own act once he has been convicted." Crime involves the infliction of harm against society. The function or object of criminal law is to provide a social mechanism with which to coerce members of society to abstain from conduct that is harmful to the interests of society.
Eugene Singarajah Thuraisingam is a lawyer from Singapore. He is the founder of the law firm Eugene Thuraisingam LLP, a law firm that specialises in international arbitration and criminal and commercial litigation. He is also known for his advocacy of human rights and for his opposition of the death penalty in Singapore. In relation to his domestic practice as a criminal lawyer in Singapore, Thuraisingam has defended many alleged suspects in high profile criminal trials, including those who were dissidents and critics of the government of Singapore. For his legal service for many defendants in the court of Singapore, Doyles Guide has named him as a leading criminal defence lawyer in Singapore in 2020.
The Woodlands double murders were the murders of pregnant housewife Choong Pei Shan and her daughter Teo Zi Ning by her husband Teo Ghim Heng on 20 January 2017. The murders, which took place in their Woodlands flat in Singapore, were supposedly committed due to Teo and his wife arguing with each other about their financial difficulties. During the argument, Teo was provoked by Choong's insults and strangled her with a towel before he killed his daughter, Zi Ning. The murder of Choong, in turn, made Teo responsible for murdering his unborn son; Choong was six months' pregnant when her husband killed her.
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