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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Law Commission >> Children: Their Non-Accidental Death or Serious Injury (Criminal Trials) (Report) [2003] EWLC 279 (30 April 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/other/EWLC/2003/279.html Cite as: [2003] EWLC 279 |
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NON-ACCIDENTAL DEATH OR
SERIOUS INJURY
(CRIMINAL TRIALS)
Item 5 of the Eighth Programme of Law Reform:
Criminal Law
Laid before Parliament by the Lord High Chancellor pursuant to section 3(2) of the
Law Commissions Act 1965
Ordered by The House of Commons to be printed
30 April 2003
HC 650
Paragraph | |
Executive Summary | Summary |
Proposals rejected | 2 |
Recommendations we are minded to make | |
Evidence and procedure | |
Scope of the recommendations | 8 |
A statutory statement of principle | 12 |
Evidential and procedural recommendations | 13 |
Substantive law | 16 |
Part I: Introduction | Part I |
Background to the Consultative Report | 1.3 |
Some preliminary points | |
A two track approach | 1.10 |
The need for the prosecution to prove that a crime has been committed | 1.14 |
The current law | 1.16 |
Partial solutions under the current law | 1.26 |
Inferring joint enterprise | 1.27 |
Prosecutions for cruelty or neglect | 1.32 |
Using one suspect as a prosecution witness | 1.35 |
Previous discussions of the need for reform | 1.37 |
The format of this report | 1.42 |
Part II: The extent of the Problem | Part II |
Part III: The civil law of child protection | Part III |
Views of respondents to the informal consultation paper | 3.2 |
The legal framework for civil proceedings | 3.14 |
The standard of proof | 3.17 |
Cases involving unexplained injuries | 3.23 |
Admissibility of evidence in civil proceedings | 3.38 |
Use of evidence obtained in civil proceedings | 3.44 |
Confidentiality of evidence in civil proceedings | 3.46 |
Conclusion | 3.52 |
Part IV: Our approach to reform | Part IV |
The duty to protect children from harm | 4.4 |
The impact of the European Convention on Human Rights and other international obligations | 4.7 |
Our initial approach – focussing on Article 6 | 4.8 |
A more comprehensive, better-balanced approach | 4.16 |
Does Article 8 of the ECHR have an impact on these issues? | 4.24 |
Conclusions on the impact of the ECHR | 4.27 |
Our proposed approach to the substantive law | 4.32 |
The range of application of our scheme | |
Which children? | 4.34 |
Should our scheme extend to vulnerable adults? | 4.35 |
To which offences should our recommendations apply? | |
"Death of or serious injury to a child" | 4.36 |
To which categories of person should our proposals apply? | |
Who has "responsibility" in this context? | 4.40 |
To which categories of defendant should special rules apply? | 4.56 |
Part V: Options which we reject | Part V |
Introduction | 5.1 |
Reverse burdens of proof | |
Placing a legal burden on the defendant | 5.3 |
Imposing an evidential burden | 5.20 |
Compulsory questioning | 5.28 |
Admitting incriminating statements made by one defendant against the other | 5.41 |
Reforming the substantive offence of manslaughter | 5.55 |
Part VI: Evidential and procedural changes | Part VI |
Introduction | 6.1 |
Recognising a responsibility to give an account | 6.4 |
Safeguards | 6.10 |
Establishing a case to answer | 6.15 |
The drawing of inferences from silence | |
The historical context | 6.24 |
The Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 | 6.27 |
Consequences of our recommendations for the operation of the | |
Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 | 6.34 |
Compliance with Article 6 of the ECHR | 6.44 |
A full circle | 6.50 |
The trial judge's duty to ensure fairness | 6.54 |
Part VII: New criminal offences? | Part VII |
An aggravated form of child cruelty or neglect | |
The position of the informal consultation paper | 7.3 |
The response leading to a development of the recommendation | 7.9 |
Cruelty or neglect leading to serious injury | 7.14 |
An offence of failing to take reasonable steps to prevent abuse | |
The approach in the informal consultation paper | 7.15 |
A different approach | 7.17 |
What would be "serious harm deriving from ill-treatment"? | 7.24 |
An illuminating example | 7.25 |
Conclusion | 7.26 |
Part VIII: Consultation issues | Part VIII |
General issues | 1 |
Rules of evidence and procedure | 7 |
New offences | 12 |
Responses | 15 |
Appendix: List of respondents to the informal consultation paper | Appendix |