Post by Roger HayterPost by FredxxThe point is still valid. If there is uncertainty over intent, then the
result will be manslaughter rather than murder.
In principle, yes. But if a) you know what guns do and b) you shoot *at*
someone then intent (to cause serious, life-threatening injury) is amply
proved for murder, unless (as in this case) you have a valid excuse for
intending serious injury. I really do not see that any lesser intent is
remotely possible.
Indeed. I think a lot of people are being misled by the fact that Blake,
when giving evidence, said that he didn't intend to kill Kaba, and have
assumed that the jury accepted this as a defence and thus acquitted him on
the basis of lack of intent. But that's incorrect in both law and fact.
Blake may not have intended to kill Kaba, but he did intend to cause him
serious injury, and stated as much in his evidence. And death as a
consequence of GBH is murder, even if there was no specific intent to kill -
if you beat someone up and they die, you can't get away with it on the
technicality that you only intended to thrash them to within an inch of
their life.
As the CPS puts it, murder is committed a person:
* of sound mind and discretion (sane)
* unlawfully kills (not self-defence or other justified killing)
* any reasonable creature (a human being)
* in being (born alive and breathing through its own lungs)
* under the King's Peace (not in wartime)
* with intent to kill or cause grievous bodily harm
There are also three partial defences to murder when all of the above
elements are proved:
* diminished responsibility
* loss of control
* killing as part of a suicide pact
https://www.cps.gov.uk/legal-guidance/homicide-murder-manslaughter-infanticide-and-causing-or-allowing-death-or-serious
Now, it's beyound doubt that Kaba was a human being who was alive at the
time he was shot, and the shooting did not take place as an act of war. It
was also not a suicide pact. Blake also did not assert diminished
responsibility, loss of control or insanity - on the contrary, his evidence
emphasised how closely he adhered to his training, and this was support by
other officers who gave evidence. He also admitted intent to cause grievous
bodily harm. So his one and only defence was that his actions were
justified. And the jury accepted that they were, and hence acquitted him.
Having accepted that his actions were justified, the jury could not possibly
have returned a guilty verdict of manslaughter even if that option had been
presented to them. Given the evidence presented in court - rational,
controlled intent to inflict GBH on another human - there are only two
possible outcomes: conviction for murder or complete acquittal. And the
verdict was acquittal.
Mark