Elements Men’s Rea and Inchoate Crimes
Keywords:
Attempt, Crimes, Mens Rea, Law, ProsecutionAbstract
The common law was slow to recognize attempted murder as a crime. Early English law was founded on the premise that attempting to injure someone was not a crime. Of process, if a man damages someone in the process of attempting to kill him,
he might be punished. But it was not a penalty for committing a more severe crime, and it seems that if no bodily harm was done as a result of the effort, no prosecution was conceivable or considered appropriate: 'It was not until the fifteenth century that the penal law was systematically expanded to attempted, and only to committed offences, in the Tribunal of the Star Chamber. According to the author, prosecuting crimes frequently necessitates a sophisticated examination of culpability in individuals who engage in organized criminal activity. People have long been divided on whether or not a person should be prosecuted for attempting to commit a crime without actually committing one. It is claimed that the offenses that the person wishes to perpetrate are of like a severe nature that, even if the offense is not accomplished, prosecuting the activities taken in the process of the offense is in the general interests.
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