Making no-case submissions in self-defence claims for primary victims of intimate partner violence charged with criminal offending

IF 1.2 Q3 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Stella Tarrant
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT Investigators, prosecutors, judges and juries have found self-defence against intimate partner violence (IPV) difficult to perceive on the facts before them because of inaccurate assumptions about the nature of this form of violence. Reforms have focussed on making sure juries have a more accurate understanding of IPV so they can make fairer assessments. These legislative and common law reforms have opened up space for a different kind of legal argument, about the insufficiency of evidence in the state's case against a defendant: no-case submissions. If a state's case is based on a misunderstanding of a defendant's claim about what they were up against when they used force, there is no way of even beginning the legal assessments required by self-defence. No-case arguments are appropriately directed at the structural nature of this problem. This article examines two Australian cases, in which primary victims of IPV were acquitted of charges that they murdered or injured their abusive partner, following submissions that the state had failed to bring evidence capable of proving the defendant had not acted defensively and within reason. These cases show how criminal prosecutions against primary victims of IPV can be challenged.
为被控刑事犯罪的亲密伴侣暴力的主要受害者提出无案件辩护
摘要调查人员、检察官、法官和陪审团发现,由于对亲密伴侣暴力性质的假设不准确,很难根据摆在他们面前的事实进行自卫。改革的重点是确保陪审团对IPV有更准确的了解,以便进行更公平的评估。这些立法和普通法改革为另一种法律争论开辟了空间,即该州针对被告的案件中证据不足:没有提交案件。如果一个州的案件是基于对被告关于他们使用武力时所面临的问题的误解,那么就无法开始自卫所需的法律评估。没有一个案例的论点是针对这个问题的结构性质的。本文审查了澳大利亚的两起案件,在这两起案件中,IPV的主要受害者被指控谋杀或伤害虐待伴侣,但被判无罪,因为该州未能提供能够证明被告没有正当辩护的证据。这些案件表明,对IPV主要受害者的刑事起诉是如何受到质疑的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Current Issues in Criminal Justice
Current Issues in Criminal Justice CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
5.30%
发文量
26
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