No, you don't. Intent to kill or cause GBH. If a reasonable person could foresee that GBH might be a result of the action, that is sufficient to prove intent.
They should have been charged with murder.
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The necessary intention exists if the defendant feels sure that death, or serious bodily harm, is a virtual certainty as a result of the defendant's actions and that the defendant appreciated that this.
OMG OMG so they knew he was being dragged, they knew death was pretty much inevitable and they did nothing about it and yet you don't think that makes them intent on killing him Jno? Do you think they they hoped he'd just get up and walk away unscathed then?
Surely they must have known the policeman would die due to their actions? As I see it, they murdered him. If they hadn't intended to murder him, they wouldn't have done what they did.
this makes a mockery of the law, ie you can kill murder and get off pretty lightly..sets a precedent for all future killers, i wonder how long they would have got.. say if they did an armed bank robbery, compared to the pc's murder.
Jackdaw //If a reasonable person could foresee that GBH might be a result of the action, that is sufficient to prove intent..//
Its a bit more complicated than that.
Premeditated intent to kill is Murder
Intent without premeditation is Manslaughter
No intent to kill that results in a death is Involuntary Manslaughter.
I'm pretty sure by the handling you would know there was something attached to your car, and as you had just had a run in with a police officer it may be a good idea to look.
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