What are the three main parts to the definition of murder?
What is meant by 'unlawful killing'?
Can an 'unlawful killing' be the result of an omission?
Which case shows a death due to an omission?
What is meant by the 'reasonable person in being'?
'AG Reference No.3 [1997]' stated...
Are Doctors exempt from homicide if they choose to turn off a life support machine?
Which case is used to illustrate this?
Which case is used to show legal causation?
Which case is used to show Factual Causation?
Does the defendant need to be the operating and substantial cause of death?
What does this principle mean?
Which case is used to show this?
What is meant by the thin skull rule?
Which case is used to illustrate this?
Is it possible for the defendant to be acquitted if the chain of causation is broken?
What does the case of 'R v. Jordan [1956]' show?
It is unusual for medical treatment to break the chain of causation, which cases show this?
Can the chain of causation be broken by the victims actions?
Which case shows the victims actions breaking the chain of causation?
In which case do the victims actions not break the chain of causation?
What is the Mens Rea for murder?
What does this mean?
What is meant by 'Aforethought'
Is it correct that if neither of the intentions are met, then the defendant is not liable for murder?
Which case showed this?
Which case confirmed this?
What is meant by 'Foresight of Consequences'?