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#crime #defences #law
Question
In [ case ] (joint appeals) the Court of Appeal said:

'The Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, s 76 did not alter the law as it had stood for many years … It was not the law that where a defendant had either started the fight with the victim, or entered it willingly, that would always and inevitably be a bar to self-defence arising. Self-defence could arise in the case of the original aggressor, but only where the violence offered by the victim was so out of proportion to what the original aggressor did that the roles were effectively reversed …'

Answer
R v Keane and McGrath [2010] EWCA Crim 2514

Tags
#crime #defences #law
Question
In [ case ] (joint appeals) the Court of Appeal said:

'The Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, s 76 did not alter the law as it had stood for many years … It was not the law that where a defendant had either started the fight with the victim, or entered it willingly, that would always and inevitably be a bar to self-defence arising. Self-defence could arise in the case of the original aggressor, but only where the violence offered by the victim was so out of proportion to what the original aggressor did that the roles were effectively reversed …'

Answer
?

Tags
#crime #defences #law
Question
In [ case ] (joint appeals) the Court of Appeal said:

'The Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, s 76 did not alter the law as it had stood for many years … It was not the law that where a defendant had either started the fight with the victim, or entered it willingly, that would always and inevitably be a bar to self-defence arising. Self-defence could arise in the case of the original aggressor, but only where the violence offered by the victim was so out of proportion to what the original aggressor did that the roles were effectively reversed …'

Answer
R v Keane and McGrath [2010] EWCA Crim 2514
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In R v Keane and McGrath [2010] EWCA Crim 2514 (joint appeals) the Court of Appeal said: 'The Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008, s 76 did not alter the law as it had stood for many years … It was not the law that

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