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  1. ADDITIONAL TASKS.
  2. IX. The defendant is being cross-examined by the prosecuting counsel. Read the dialogue to fulfil the tasks.
  3. Read the text about the great influence of the contemporary mass media and say whether this influence is positive or negative. Fulfil the tasks.
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Crime is categorized as a part of public law-the law regulating the relations between citizens and the state. Crimes can be thought of as acts which the state considers to be wrong and which can be punished by the state. There are some acts which are crimes in one country but not in another. For example, it is a crime to drink alcohol in Saudi Arabia, but not in Egypt. It is a crime to smoke marijuana in England, but not (in prescribed places) in the Netherlands. It is a crime to have more than one wife at the same time in France, but not in Indonesia. It is a crime to have an abortion in Ireland, but not in Spain. It is a crime not to flush a public toilet after use in Singapore, but not in Malaysia. In general, however, there is quite a lot of agreement among states as to which acts are criminal. A visitor to a foreign country can be sure that stealing, physically attacking someone or damaging their property will be unlawful.

Each crime may be very different. For example, the crime of theftis defined in England under the 1968 Theft Act as: dishonestly appropriating property belonging to another with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it.

The same Act also defines in detail crimes such as burglary(entering someone's land without permission intending to steal or commit an act of violence) and robbery(using force or threats in order to steal from someone). There are usually two important elements to a crime: (I) the criminal act itself; and (II) the criminal state of mind of the person when he committed the act. In Anglo-American law these are known by the Latin terms of (I) Actus Reusand (II) Mens Rea.The differences between these can be explained by using the crime of murder as an example.

In English law there is a rather long common law definition ofmurder:The unlawful killing of a human being under the Queen's Peace, with malice aforethought, so that the victim dies within a year and a day.

There is a different definition of mens rea for each crime. Sometimes the defendant must have intended to do a particular thing. In murder, however, it is interesting that the defendant need not have intended to kill, but just to have wounded someone seriously. He need not even have had a direct intention; in some cases, a defendant has been found guilty if he killed someone because of recklessness-not caring about the dangers.

The prosecution must show that the suspect did in fact cause the death of someone. It must be an unlawful killing under the "Queen's Peace" because there are some kinds of killing which the state considers lawful-for example, when a soldier kills an enemy soldier in a time of war.

In the 1983 case of Pagett, the defendant held a girl in front of him to prevent police from firing at him. But he himself shot at a policeman and one of the policemen fired back, accidentally killing the girl. The court decided that the defendant could have foreseen such a result when he shot at the policeman from behind the girl, and, as a result, his act was a substantial cause of the death. In the 1959 case of Jordon, the defendant stabbed a man who was then taken to a hospital where he started to recover. But the man died when hospital staff gave him drugs to which he was allergic. In this case the court decided that the hospital's error was the substantial cause of death rather than the attack by the defendant.

In general, if the prosecution fails to prove either actus or mens, the court must decide there was no crime and the case is over.

A defendant may still avoid guilt if he can show he has a defense-a reason the court should excuse his act. Different systems of law recognize different and usually limited sets of defenses. For example, English law sometimes allow the defense of duress-being forced to commit a crime because of threats that you or someone else will be harmed if you don't. Duress may be used as a defense against the charge of murder as a secondary party (helping the murderer), but is not available if the defendant is charged as the principal murderer.

Another defense is that of insanity.In most countries a person cannot be found guilty of a crime if in a doctor's opinion he cannot have been responsible for his actions because of mental illness. But this defense requires careful proof. If it is proven the defendant will not be sent to a prison, but instead to a mental hospital.

It might be argued that a person is not responsible for his actions if he is intoxicated-drunk or under the influence of drugs. In fact, an intoxicated person may not even know what he is doing. However, in Britain and many other countries, there is a general principle that people who knowingly get themselves intoxicated must be held responsible for their acts. Consequently, intoxication is not a defense.

Nearly every system of law recognizes the defense of self-defense.In English law, a defendant can avoid guilt for injuring someone if he can convince the court that the force he used was reasonable to protect himself in the circumstances. In some countries, shooting an unarmed burglar would be recognized as self-defense, but in other it might be considered unreasonable force.

The concept of defense should not be confused with that ofmitigation- reasons your punishment should not be harsh . If a person has a defense, the court finds him not guilty.

Although most criminal laws in the world refer to acts of violence or theft, there are laws regulating almost every kind of human behavior: for example, what we do with our land; what we say and write; how we run our businesses; even what we wear. Sometimes governments "create new crimes" by identifying a form of behavior and passing a new law to deal with it. In most industrialized countries existing theft laws were not adequate to deal with computer crimes where complex kinds of information are stolen, altered or used to deceive other, and, thus, new laws have been passed.

Technical change is one reason criminal law is one of the fastest growing areas of the law. Another reason is that the number of crimes committed in some countries seem to be increasing rapidly. One more reason is that different societies-or perhaps it is different governments-continually review their ideas of what should and shouldn't be a considered crime. Discrimination against someone on the grounds of race or sex was not acknowledged as a crime until recently, and is still not recognized in some countries. Recent cases of euthanasia(shortening the life of a sick person) are causing re-evaluations of the concept of murder.



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