Murder in English law

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Murder_in_English_law an entity of type: WikicatCommonLawOffencesInEnglandAndWales

Mord (engl. murder) ist im Strafrecht von England und Wales das schwerwiegendste aller Tötungsdelikte. Der Mordtatbestand ist nicht durch statute law definiert, sondern eine , d. h. ein Straftatbestand, der nur durch Richter- bzw. Gewohnheitsrecht besteht. Bis 1965 wurde Mord mit der Todesstrafe bestraft, heute ist zwingend die lebenslange Freiheitsstrafe bei Mord zu verhängen, weshalb in der Praxis oftmals wegen des Straftatbestandes voluntary manslaughter angeklagt wird, der dem Richter größere Freiheit bei der Strafzumessung gibt. rdf:langString
Murder is an offence under the common law of England and Wales. It is considered the most serious form of homicide, in which one person kills another with the intention to cause either death or serious injury unlawfully. The element of intentionality was originally termed malice aforethought, although it required neither malice nor premeditation. Baker (Glanville Williams Textbook of Criminal Law; London: Sweet & Maxwell, 2015), 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. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Mord (England und Wales)
rdf:langString Murder in English law
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rdf:langString June 2022
rdf:langString November 2019
rdf:langString This seems to be two cases?
rdf:langString Sentencing Act 2020 reformed sentencing including repeal of most of the 2000 Act
rdf:langString Mord (engl. murder) ist im Strafrecht von England und Wales das schwerwiegendste aller Tötungsdelikte. Der Mordtatbestand ist nicht durch statute law definiert, sondern eine , d. h. ein Straftatbestand, der nur durch Richter- bzw. Gewohnheitsrecht besteht. Bis 1965 wurde Mord mit der Todesstrafe bestraft, heute ist zwingend die lebenslange Freiheitsstrafe bei Mord zu verhängen, weshalb in der Praxis oftmals wegen des Straftatbestandes voluntary manslaughter angeklagt wird, der dem Richter größere Freiheit bei der Strafzumessung gibt.
rdf:langString Murder is an offence under the common law of England and Wales. It is considered the most serious form of homicide, in which one person kills another with the intention to cause either death or serious injury unlawfully. The element of intentionality was originally termed malice aforethought, although it required neither malice nor premeditation. Baker (Glanville Williams Textbook of Criminal Law; London: Sweet & Maxwell, 2015), 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. Because murder is generally defined in law as an intent to cause serious harm or injury (alone or with others), combined with a death arising from that intention, there are certain circumstances where a death will be treated as murder even if the defendant did not wish to kill the actual victim. This is called "transferred malice", and arises in two common cases: * The defendant intended serious harm to one or more persons, but an unintended other person dies as a result; * Several people share an intent to do serious harm, and the victim dies because of the action of any of those involved (for example, if another person goes "further than expected" or performs an unexpectedly lethal action).
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