Quizzes & Puzzles63 mins ago
gbh
i was walking on a firld and this las wicth is 15 i new was stering rumers about me and my girlfreand and we was mouthing at eacth other and i went to kick her but mist and she started to walk of and she was saying stuff bad stuff wicth i dont wont to say about my familey when she was walking aways and i got mad and frow abottle with madness not at her but it went that way and hit her her bk of head and gid her 3cm cut wot am i looking at its been past to crown corut it was a acedant cood i go to prison plzz help jamie
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by jamief. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You can go to prison for GBH, however if you didn't mean to do it, this may be taken into consideration.
You say you did not throw the bottle at her, and yet it hit her back? So you meant to throw it at her, you just didn't mean to cause harm. There is a difference between GBH and GBH with intent, the latter being the more serious, so you would have to convince the jury that there was no malicious intent to cause GBH. This is very important.
There is a section 18 and a section 20 that cover GBH, the punishments for these differ largely and it all comes down to 'intent' to do harm, and whether you can prove this in a court of law. Section 18 requires intent, section 20 covers the harm done to a person from another and does not cover intent.
If you have convicted of a section 20, then the maximum sentence would be 5 years in prison. Or you may be fined, and not go to prison. A section 18 is more serious due to the intent to cause damage and you could go to prisn for any period the judge prescribes.
You must argue your lack of intent to cause GBH.
You say you did not throw the bottle at her, and yet it hit her back? So you meant to throw it at her, you just didn't mean to cause harm. There is a difference between GBH and GBH with intent, the latter being the more serious, so you would have to convince the jury that there was no malicious intent to cause GBH. This is very important.
There is a section 18 and a section 20 that cover GBH, the punishments for these differ largely and it all comes down to 'intent' to do harm, and whether you can prove this in a court of law. Section 18 requires intent, section 20 covers the harm done to a person from another and does not cover intent.
If you have convicted of a section 20, then the maximum sentence would be 5 years in prison. Or you may be fined, and not go to prison. A section 18 is more serious due to the intent to cause damage and you could go to prisn for any period the judge prescribes.
You must argue your lack of intent to cause GBH.
-- answer removed --
I just think that it's a shame that people have to learn this way. Given the poor quality of English and grammar, not to mention someone getting upset about a 15 year old girl talking about your own girlfriend, I would expect this youth to only be around the age of 15 - 18. How can someone throw a bottle at someone and not intend for it to hit them? The answer in his circumstance is that he can't. We've all lost our temper, hell I'll get angry and throw a bottle, but not at somebody. The intent is justifiable as he wished; given the direction he threw the bottle (he wasn't in an alley way where he could only throw it in 2 directions, but an open field (I assume this was a wide-open field)) to hit the girl. Whether it was his intention to inflict physical pain upon her is not my judgement.
Dizmo.
Dizmo.