Common Purpose (Law)

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It's the
Law
Icon law.svg
To punish
and protect
  • Freedom of speech
  • Rebuttable presumption
  • Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006
  • Japanese-American concentration camps
  • Stare decisis
  • Property
  • Autism omnibus trial
  • Berkeley Free Speech Movement
  • Personhood laws
  • Texas v. Johnson
  • Sex worker-exclusionary radical feminism
  • List of actions prohibited by the Bible

Common purpose is a legal doctrine stating that all participants in a crime are responsible for its consequences, even if it wasn't the original intention. For example, if a gang of criminals agrees to rob a building by knocking out the security guard, they are all deemed guilty of murder if the knocker-out kills the guard. One of the more notorious uses of common purpose was the trial of the Sharpeville six, a group of protesters in Apartheid-era South Africa sentenced to death when the mob they were part of murdered a local politician.


Categories: [Law]


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