The case discusses about instructing solicitors act for Mark. Unlawful activities carried out by a militant group of animal rights protesters in Oxford shire Constabulary. The police suspected that Mark was involved in planning acts of violence against university employees who are involved in the planning and construction of new animal testing laboratories, as well as against the new university laboratory buildings. The security guard suffered a fractured skull. Mark was arrested at his home and taken to the Oxford police station where he was cautioned and questioned. The police searched his home where they found a black scarf similar to that worn by the attacker, but did not find the baseball bat. Mark was charged with causing grievous bodily harm with intent. Sam, one of the undercover officers who had infiltrated the militant animal rights group, was shown police photographs and videos taken at the scene as well as CCTV footage of the demonstration. Instructing solicitors understand that Sam was certain that the attacker was Mark. Instructing solicitors understand that another undercover officer carefully studied all the photographs, videos and CCTV footage and also came to the conclusion that the attacker was Mark. Nasser identified Mark at a properly conducted identity parade.
Case analysis
Mark is proven to be guilty as per the Mal Real Body (often abbreviated to ABH). The offense is defined in section 47 of the offences against the person act 1861. In and can be tried in either the magistrate's court. The audiovisual sector is booming, and we are daily confronted with the image technologies without even paying attention, including through surveillance cameras. CCTV is simply the term used to refer to the CCTV (closed circuit television). There is no country where it is no longer present in the UK, where it occurs equally in the places called 'private' in public places: the cameras abound in the city center, while in other European countries or the U.S. are found mainly in shopping centers, transport or banks (Alexander & Kimberly 2008). Examples of wounds that would be considered ABH include:
Lost or broken teeth
Temporary loss of sensory function, including loss of consciousness
Extensive or multiple bruising
Displaced broken nose
Minor fractures of the bones
Minor cuts requiring medical treatment
Committing an assault on another person, to cause any damage above constitute ABH: in legal terminology, such an assault is Actus Reus ABH.
Supranational law must of course be respected by the UK. It recognizes not only individuals, through the UDHR of 1948, a right to security that includes the freedom to come and go as well as protecting the individual against arbitrary, but they also recognized the right human dignity, enshrined in numerous international instruments as the preamble of the UN Charter of 1945, the UDHR or the ECHR (Ibid). In addition, video surveillance of places not accessible to the public is unlawful when it infringes the right to respect for private life: that right protected by s.12 of the UDHR and art .8 § 1 of ECHR includes the right image and ...